Send Email Attachments with a Voice Command
“Can you send me that document?” You hear it ten times a week. Each time: find the file, open email, compose a message, attach the file, type a note, click send. Six steps for a ten-second request. Vox reduces it to one.
Send any file by voice
“Computer, email the Q3 budget spreadsheet to Sarah with a note saying here are the updated numbers.”
Vox found the file by understanding what you meant (not by exact filename), looked up the recipient from your contacts, composed a professional message, and sent it. You didn't open a single app.
Multiple attachments
“Computer, send Alex the mockups and the project timeline. Tell him the designs are finalized.”
Found 2 matching files: ~/Design/app-mockups-v3.pdf and ~/Documents/project-timeline.xlsx. Sending both to alex@company.com with your note. Done.
Vox uses fuzzy matching to find files. You don't need to remember exact filenames — just describe what you're looking for and it finds the best match.
Save attachments from incoming email
The reverse works too — pull attachments out of your inbox:
“Computer, save the attachment from David's last email to my Projects folder.”
Chain with document creation
Create a document and email it in one command:
“Computer, write a summary of our meeting decisions, save it as a PDF, and send it to the whole team.”
Vox creates the document via create_pdf_document, then sends it via send_email with recipients pulled from search_contacts. Three tools chained from one sentence.
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