One AI handles your calls, emails, research, and coordination right now. The other promises to do everything for you eventually. They're both called "AI assistants," but one is shipping and the other is pitching.
ai.com made headlines on February 8, 2026 with a Super Bowl LX commercial seen by over 100 million viewers. The platform, founded by Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek, promises autonomous AI agents that can trade stocks, manage calendars, automate workflows, and eventually do anything you can do on a computer. The domain alone cost $70 million. The ad? Another $15 million. The product? Still in beta, with most users waiting in a queue to generate their agent.
KallyAI has been quietly handling tasks for real users—making phone calls, sending emails, researching vendors, coordinating multi-step projects, and delivering results with full transcripts. No Super Bowl ad. No $70 million domain. Just an AI executive assistant that actually gets things done. You can try it right now for $1.
The fundamental difference: working product vs big vision
KallyAI executes tasks today. ai.com promises capabilities tomorrow. Tell KallyAI to dispute an insurance charge—it calls the company, emails the confirmation, and delivers a full transcript. Ask it to find a caterer—it researches options, calls vendors, compares quotes, and sends you a summary. Tell ai.com the same thing and… you join a waitlist.
This isn't a criticism of ai.com's vision. Autonomous agents that can use any application and share improvements across a network is genuinely ambitious. But ambition and execution are different things. As of February 2026, KallyAI is executing. ai.com is still building.
What is KallyAI?
KallyAI is a fully AI-powered executive assistant that executes real-world tasks on your behalf. You describe what you need in plain language—"Call my insurance company and dispute the $200 charge" or "Research three plumbers in my area and get quotes"—and KallyAI handles it end to end. It places actual phone calls, navigates automated menus, speaks with real people, sends follow-up emails, and delivers complete transcripts and summaries. You approve the plan before it acts and get proof of everything it did.
What is ai.com?
ai.com is an autonomous agent platform launched by Kris Marszalek (CEO of Crypto.com) on February 8, 2026. The vision: a decentralized network of self-improving AI agents that can use any application, complete any task, and share improvements across millions of agents. Each agent gets its own computer environment and operates on your behalf. It's built on the OpenClaw open-source framework.
Promised capabilities include stock trading, workflow automation, calendar management, messaging, and subscription cancellations. The platform aims to be the consumer-friendly entry point to agentic AI—"going from zero to AI agent in 60 seconds."
The reality as of February 2026: ai.com is in beta. Most users can claim a username (ai.com/username) and wait in a queue. The Super Bowl ad drove so much traffic the site crashed. Specific capabilities, limitations, and actual user experiences remain unclear because the product isn't widely available yet.
Feature-by-feature comparison
| Feature | KallyAI | ai.com |
|---|---|---|
| Product status | Live, shipping, paying customers | Beta, queue-based access |
| Phone calls | Makes real calls to real businesses | Not available |
| Sends and manages emails | Promised, not confirmed live | |
| Research | Web research with summaries | Promised via autonomous agents |
| Calendar | Schedules appointments via calls | Promised, not confirmed live |
| Stock trading | Not offered | Promised future feature |
| Workflow automation | Task coordination and multi-step execution | Core promise, limited availability |
| Transcripts & proof | Full transcripts, recordings, summaries | Not applicable yet |
| Approval gates | You approve plans before AI acts | "Permission-based control" promised |
| Response time | Immediate task execution | Queue-based, unclear timeline |
| Mobile app | iOS app available | Not available |
| Self-improving network | No—improves via development cycle | Core thesis: agents share improvements |
Pricing comparison
KallyAI pricing
| Plan | Price | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Trial | $1 | 100 credits to test with real tasks |
| Starter | $19/month | 200 credits/month |
| Pro | $49/month | 600 credits/month |
| Power | $99/month | 1,500 credits/month |
| Business | $199/month | 4,500 credits/month |
ai.com pricing
| Plan | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Free tier | Free | Basic access, limited capabilities |
| Paid subscription | Unknown | Enhanced capabilities, more tokens |
The $85 million Super Bowl launch vs the $1 trial
ai.com spent $85 million on launch day—$70 million for the domain, $15 million for the Super Bowl ad. The commercial showed two glowing orbs colliding in space to reveal the ai.com logo, with a message that "AGI is coming soon" and an invitation to claim your username. No product demo. No feature walkthrough. No customer testimonials. According to iSpot viewer surveys, the ad scored in the bottom 3% of Super Bowl ads for likeability over the past five years.
KallyAI offers a $1 trial with 100 credits. No commercial needed—you can handle real tasks within minutes of signing up and judge the product yourself. The difference is philosophical: ai.com asks you to believe in a vision. KallyAI asks you to try the product.
Why wait for the future? Get things done today.
KallyAI handles calls, emails, research, and multi-step coordination right now. Try for $1 with 100 credits—no commitment required.
Try KallyAI for $1Real-world scenarios: which tool wins?
Call your insurance company about a billing error
KallyAI wins. It calls immediately, navigates the phone tree, explains the dispute, and sends you a transcript. ai.com has no phone call capability.
Schedule a dentist appointment
KallyAI wins. It calls the office, checks availability, books the slot, and confirms by email. ai.com cannot make phone calls.
Research catering options for an event
KallyAI wins. It calls multiple vendors, gets quotes, and compiles a comparison. ai.com's agents might eventually do web-based research, but the feature isn't available to most users yet.
Automate a stock trading workflow
ai.com wins (theoretically). KallyAI doesn't offer stock trading. ai.com promises this as a future capability. If financial automation is your primary need, ai.com's vision may appeal—though the feature isn't live.
Coordinate a multi-step project: find a contractor, get quotes, schedule estimates
KallyAI wins. It researches contractors online, calls the top options, emails you a comparison of quotes, and schedules in-home estimates—all from a single request. ai.com's agents might eventually handle multi-step coordination, but the capability isn't available yet.
When to choose KallyAI
- You have tasks piling up—calls, emails, research, vendor coordination
- You want an AI that works today, not in a future beta
- You need multi-step task execution: research a topic, call vendors, email results
- You prefer transparent pricing with clear credit costs
- You need transcripts and proof of completed tasks
- You want to try before you buy ($1 gets you started)
When to choose ai.com
- You want to be an early adopter of autonomous agent technology
- You're primarily interested in workflow automation beyond phone calls
- You believe in the decentralized, self-improving agent thesis
- You want stock trading and financial automation (when available)
- You're comfortable waiting for a beta product to mature
What about using both?
If ai.com delivers on its vision, it could become a powerful general-purpose agent platform. In that future, KallyAI and ai.com might complement each other—KallyAI handling the phone-call-heavy tasks that require real voice interaction with businesses, while ai.com handles digital workflow automation, app integration, and financial tasks.
For now, there's nothing to "use together" because ai.com isn't shipping a product most people can use. If and when ai.com exits beta with working capabilities, the combination could be powerful: KallyAI for the real world (calls, emails, appointments), ai.com for the digital world (app automation, trading, workflows).
Frequently Asked Questions
Can ai.com make phone calls?
No. As of February 2026, ai.com does not offer phone call capabilities. The platform focuses on digital tasks like workflow automation and calendar management. For phone calls, KallyAI is the established solution.
Is ai.com a scam?
No evidence suggests ai.com is a scam. Kris Marszalek has a track record building Crypto.com to 150+ million users. The $70 million domain purchase and $15 million Super Bowl ad represent genuine investment. However, the product is in early beta with limited availability. The gap between the marketing spend and the product's current state is notable.
Is ai.com free?
ai.com offers a free tier with basic access. Paid subscriptions are planned for enhanced capabilities. Specific pricing hasn't been published yet.
How does ai.com's "self-improving agent network" work?
According to ai.com, when one agent learns to complete a new task, that improvement is shared across all agents on the network. The technical details haven't been disclosed. It's built on the OpenClaw open-source framework.
Can I try KallyAI right now?
Yes. KallyAI offers 100 credits for $1. You can handle real tasks—calls, emails, research—within minutes of signing up. No queue, no waitlist, no beta access required.
Which is better for business use?
KallyAI is better for businesses that need real tasks executed—appointment scheduling, vendor research and outreach, customer follow-ups, billing disputes, email coordination. ai.com positions itself against enterprise platforms like Microsoft Agent 365 and OpenAI Frontier, but without a shipping product, business adoption isn't practical yet.
Ready to get things done today?
KallyAI handles calls, emails, and research so you can focus on what matters. Try for $1 with 100 credits.
Try KallyAI for $1