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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.zocomputer.com/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Your bio is a short, always-on note about you that Zo reads on every conversation. It’s the difference between Zo guessing who it’s talking to and Zo already knowing your work, your interests, and how you like to be helped. To edit your bio, open Settings → AI → Bio, or just ask Zo to update it for you.

What to include

A useful bio is short and concrete. Think of it as the context you’d give a new assistant on day one.
  • What you do. Your role, your company, the kind of work you spend most of your time on.
  • What you’re working on. Current projects, recurring goals, the topics you ask about most.
  • What you know. Tools you’re fluent in, fields you have a background in, where you’d want Zo to skip the basics.
  • How you like to be helped. Tone, level of detail, whether you want pushback or quick agreement, formats you prefer.
You don’t need to write paragraphs. A dozen well-chosen lines beat a wall of text.

Examples

A software engineer:
Senior backend engineer at a Series B fintech. I write Go and TypeScript every day, manage a small team, and own our payments service. I prefer terse technical answers, code over prose, and I want to be told when I’m wrong.
A founder learning to code:
Non-technical founder learning Python so I can prototype my own ideas. Explain concepts with concrete examples and analogies, but don’t dumb things down. I’d rather understand than copy-paste.
A writer:
Freelance writer focused on climate and energy. I draft long-form essays and weekly newsletters. Help me think, not write. Don’t generate prose for me unless I ask. Push back on weak arguments.

What to leave out

The bio isn’t the place for one-off task instructions or things that change often. For those, use:
  • A rule for behavior you want in specific situations (“always be concise”, “never use emojis”).
  • A persona for a separate character with its own voice or tool access.
  • A skill for a repeatable workflow you want Zo to run on demand.
Not sure what to write? Ask Zo to draft a bio with you. It’ll ask a few questions and turn the answers into something you can edit.