Amazon Web Services on Tuesday introduced a desktop application for Amazon Quick, the companys AI assistant designed to work across workplace applications and local files while adapting to individual user preferences over time. The desktop client is built to run continuously on a users computer and monitor activity across connected apps to provide context-aware assistance.
The Quick desktop app can connect directly to calendars, email systems, and commonly used workplace tools, including Google Workspace, Zoom, Microsoft 365, and Salesforce. According to Jigar Thakkar, Vice President of Agentic AI for Business at Amazon Quick, the assistant creates a personal knowledge graph from user interactions to capture work preferences and business context. The system also indexes documents and learns from session activity so it can respond using organizational data.
Functionality in the desktop release includes access to local files and the ability to automate browser-based workflows. The application can be linked to developer tools such as Kiro CLI and Claude Code to coordinate tasks that span multiple applications, enabling developers to include the assistant in more complex pipelines.
Amazon also deployed an array of new capabilities for Quick beyond the desktop client. Users can now ask Quick, via natural language, to build custom applications, dashboards, and web pages. The assistant is capable of generating full documents, presentation slides, infographics, and images from within the chat interface, allowing workers to stay in a conversational experience while producing deliverables.
Microsoft 365 extensions for Quick entered preview status, bringing assistant features into Outlook, Word, PowerPoint, and Excel. Additional integrations with Google Workspace, Zoom, Airtable, Dropbox, and Microsoft Teams are listed as available, broadening Quicks connections across widely used productivity and collaboration platforms.
Several organizations are already deploying Quick. The customer roster cited by Amazon includes 3M, GoDaddy, AstraZeneca, BMW, Mondelez, the NFL, and Southwest Airlines. New York Life, noted as the largest mutual life insurer in the United States, is using Quick for reconciliation, premium processing, and compliance reporting.
Executives from some customers described material efficiency gains. David C. Gregorat, CTO of Institutional Life at New York Life, said the assistant replaced multiple reports and analyst workflows with a single conversational interface. Chris Hesse, CTO at Mondelez International, stated Quick shortened task completion times from hours to minutes for employees who analyze data sets and locate information.
Amazon provided additional examples of time savings. Amazon Books reported that coordination and document development time fell by 80 percent after adopting Quick. 3M reported that its sales representatives save more than five hours per week through use of the assistant.
The desktop release emphasizes integrations, document indexing, and continuous background operation to provide contextual answers based on organizational data. The new features and previews aim to embed the assistant more directly into common productivity workflows across numerous enterprise applications.