Install Cal.com scheduling agents in Slack, Telegram, OpenClaw, or build your own with the Cal.com API. AI-powered scheduling for humans and agents alike.
its fun but also feels really natural to coordinate meetings by chat.
for the past 3 weeks i have been toying with my own openclaw agent interacting with our API v2 and today we're super excited to release a whole catalog of useful skills, tools, APIs, CLIs and more.
for those who don't wanna set up OpenClaw (fair), get the beauty of natural language agents into your Slack channel or text via Telegram.
we have a whole list of use cases https://cal.com/agents#use-cases explaining what you can do with our Cal.com Agent so get creative!
at this point im really just vibing, the agentic space is fun to tinker with. not sure if this is gonna be a $100B product but be my guest and play around with it.
we are announcing a hackathon in the next few days as well so make sure to join the waitlist! go.cal.com/hackathon
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@peer_rich This feels deceptively simple, but there’s something deeper here.
Scheduling has always been a coordination problem between humans — back and forth, constraints, availability, preferences.
What’s interesting is that when agents handle this through chat, they’re not just automating booking, they’re starting to act as intermediaries for real-world coordination.
Instead of humans negotiating time, agents begin to do that on their behalf.
Curious how you see this evolving.
Do you think this stays as a productivity feature inside scheduling tools, or could it become a broader layer where agents handle coordination between people and systems more generally?
@heyalizaid thanks ali! im glad you like the launch
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Adding AI agents to Cal.com's scheduling infrastructure is the natural evolution — most scheduling friction comes from the back-and-forth negotiation that an agent can handle autonomously. Being open-source gives Cal.com a trust advantage over closed competitors when it comes to letting an AI agent manage your calendar. How do the agents handle scheduling conflicts where both parties have tight windows — do they negotiate alternative times proactively or just surface the conflict?
Replies
Cal.com
what can i say, i got lobster-hooked 🦞🪝
its fun but also feels really natural to coordinate meetings by chat.
for the past 3 weeks i have been toying with my own openclaw agent interacting with our API v2 and today we're super excited to release a whole catalog of useful skills, tools, APIs, CLIs and more.
for those who don't wanna set up OpenClaw (fair), get the beauty of natural language agents into your Slack channel or text via Telegram.
we have a whole list of use cases https://cal.com/agents#use-cases explaining what you can do with our Cal.com Agent so get creative!
at this point im really just vibing, the agentic space is fun to tinker with. not sure if this is gonna be a $100B product but be my guest and play around with it.
we are announcing a hackathon in the next few days as well so make sure to join the waitlist! go.cal.com/hackathon
@peer_rich This feels deceptively simple, but there’s something deeper here.
Scheduling has always been a coordination problem between humans — back and forth, constraints, availability, preferences.
What’s interesting is that when agents handle this through chat, they’re not just automating booking, they’re starting to act as intermediaries for real-world coordination.
Instead of humans negotiating time, agents begin to do that on their behalf.
Curious how you see this evolving.
Do you think this stays as a productivity feature inside scheduling tools, or could it become a broader layer where agents handle coordination between people and systems more generally?
ThumblifyAI
been using Cal.com for a while…
really cool direction for the product.
ai powered scheduling for humans and agents is a very interesting step.
Cal.com
@heyalizaid thanks ali! im glad you like the launch
Adding AI agents to Cal.com's scheduling infrastructure is the natural evolution — most scheduling friction comes from the back-and-forth negotiation that an agent can handle autonomously. Being open-source gives Cal.com a trust advantage over closed competitors when it comes to letting an AI agent manage your calendar. How do the agents handle scheduling conflicts where both parties have tight windows — do they negotiate alternative times proactively or just surface the conflict?
Cal.com
@svyat_dvoretski appreciate it
AutonomyAI
Congrats on the launch!
Cal.com
@lev_kerzhner thank you lev!
Cal.com
There’s a big number of meetings being scheduled via text/chat. This is the way
Cal.com
@richardpoelderl it feels surprisingly intuitive to text your agent "book bailey asap" or so. really neat
Huddle01 Cloud
Congrats Peer! Very cool.
Cal.com
@ranjan3118 appreciate it
Can you guys add the ability to add a file when a meeting is set up? That request has been out there for a long time
make time programmable 👀
AI agents in scheduling is smart. Less back-and-forth coordination headaches!