
Skymel launches ARIA to unite major AI models in one platform
Skymel has launched ARIA, an artificial intelligence assistant that coordinates multiple major AI models to provide unified responses to user queries.
ARIA combines the capabilities of well-known AI models such as ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Perplexity into a single platform, allowing users to receive answers that draw on the collective strengths of these systems without the need to operate each model separately.
The service aims to address challenges that users encounter when attempting to source comprehensive answers from different AI models, including the need to create complex prompts, switch between services, or handle multiple subscriptions.
Neetu Pathak, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder of Skymel, said, "ARIA is a fundamentally different kind of AI assistant. For too long, people have had to jump between ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and others, often feeding the output of one model into another, just to get a complete answer. With ARIA, you simply ask your question or upload your file, and our system instantly orchestrates a custom workflow across every leading AI model, delivering a unified, accurate result. No technical expertise is required and there is no more guesswork. It's just the best of AI, every time."
At the core of ARIA is an orchestration engine that analyses the user's query, selects the most suitable AI models for each aspect of the task, and processes a sequence of outputs across different models in real time. The final result is a single response, synthesised from the work of each model involved.
Key features include automatic model selection—where ARIA divides tasks and assigns individual steps to the model best aligned with that requirement. The platform then manages the process in sequence, validating and refining outputs in pursuit of more accurate results. ARIA also learns continually from user interactions to optimise its model selection and workflow logic over time.
Users interact with a streamlined interface, receiving comprehensive answers without needing to know which AI models are at work behind the scenes. The service is being offered for a flat monthly rate, intended to remove the need for multiple logins or hidden costs often associated with access to several AI platforms.
Expanding on Skymel's vision for AI accessibility, Pathak said, "AI should work for you, not the other way around. With ARIA, we're making advanced AI accessible to everyone, with no prompt engineering, no technical barriers, just effortless intelligence that adapts to your needs. This is the future of AI assistance."
Skymel has opened a private beta for early adopters who wish to take part in shaping the assistant's ongoing development. In addition, the company plans to launch its Orchestrator Agent SDK and API, providing developers with tools to integrate ARIA's adaptive AI pipeline capabilities into their own applications.