On-device tools for GPs and for everyone. Private by design.
Photo to generate
public/images/free-hub.jpg
Photoreal, ~16:11 landscape. A diptych-feel composition suggesting two settings: a tidy clinic desk with a desktop computer on one side and a cosy home desk with a laptop on the other, both clearly self-contained with no cloud or server imagery. Cool clean light unifying both, subtle green (#00BF63) accents. Calm, trustworthy, human mood. No readable screen text, no patient-identifiable data, no third-party or competitor logos or UI, no people or faceless models.
Free can mean a lot of things, and most of them are disappointing. A free tool is often a demo with the useful parts removed, or a trial that quietly starts asking for money, or — worse — a product where you are the price, paying with your data and your attention. We wanted to offer something different: tools that are genuinely complete, genuinely free, and built to respect the person using them. No account to create, no card to enter, no telemetry watching over your shoulder. You download them, and they are yours.
There is a reason beyond goodwill. Putting capable, private tools into everyday hands is the fastest way to learn what is actually useful, and the surest test of whether our principles hold up outside a demonstration. A tool that has to run on your own machine, without a remote service to lean on, has nowhere to hide. If it is genuinely helpful under those conditions, it is helpful — and that is exactly the kind of foundation we want to build the rest of our work on.
Free, private, and yours.
Useful clinical AI you can download today — built to respect your privacy.
Free
A genuine free download — nothing to buy.
On-device
Runs entirely on your own computer.
No tracking
No account and no telemetry.
Yours
Your notes and files stay with you.
Two tools, one principle
Different jobs, the same promise.
MedPodGP is built for the working day of a general practitioner — an ambient voice AI that listens to the consultation and turns it into documentation in near-real-time, drafting the notes, prescriptions and letters so more attention can go to the person in the room and less to the keyboard. Emu is broader: a general-purpose, multi-modal assistant for everyone, packing several kinds of AI into one app for everyday tasks at home. The jobs are different, but the promise underneath them is identical — completely local, with your information staying on your own machine.
MedPodGP — ambient voice documentation for GPs.
Emu — a multi-modal everyday assistant for everyone.
Both run completely locally, with your data staying on your machine.
Every free tool shares the same foundation: on-device, private, and yours.
Who they help
A few people we had in mind.
Realistic moments where a private, on-device assistant earns its place on the desk.
Picture a general practitioner at the end of a long list, facing a stack of notes that still need writing up. The clinical thinking is already done; what remains is the slow, careful work of turning it into a clear record. A tool that helps draft that record — on the same machine, with nothing leaving the room — gives back minutes that add up to real time, without ever putting a patient's information somewhere it should not be. The clinician reads, edits, and signs off; the assistant simply removes some of the friction.
Photo to generate
public/images/free-gp.jpg
Photoreal, ~16:11 landscape. A general practitioner at the end of a consultation, relaxed shoulders, a desktop computer on the desk with a small microphone, a patient softly out of focus rising to leave. Cool clean daylight, subtle green (#00BF63) accents. Relieved, unhurried, end-of-visit mood. No readable screen text, no patient-identifiable data, no real medical records, no third-party or competitor logos or UI, consented or faceless models.
Or picture a student, a researcher, or simply someone who prefers their work stay their own. They want a capable assistant for reading, drafting, and thinking through a problem — but they are wary of pasting half-finished ideas into a service that keeps them. An assistant that runs entirely on their own device lets them work freely, because there is no audience and no archive but their own. Privacy here is not about having something to hide; it is about being able to think without an over-the-shoulder presence.
Photo to generate
public/images/free-home.jpg
Photoreal, ~16:11 landscape. A student or home worker at a desk with a laptop, books and a mug, an airplane-mode or no-signal cue visible, no router nearby. Cool clean light with cosy warmth, subtle green (#00BF63) accent. Focused, private, comfortable mood. No readable screen text, no third-party or competitor logos or UI, consented or faceless model.
What ties these scenarios together is a quiet kind of respect. None of these people should have to trade their privacy for a useful tool, and none of them should have to become an expert in data handling just to feel safe. Keeping the work on the device makes the safe choice the default choice — the one you get without having to think about it. That is the bar we try to clear: useful enough to reach for, and trustworthy enough that reaching for it never costs you anything you did not mean to give.
Download and try it today.
Genuinely useful clinical AI for GPs and for everyone — private by design.