Run multiple accounts of all your favourite apps side by side in one window.
WhatsApp on your phone, Telegram in a tab, Gmail in another. Switching between them all day is exhausting, and something always slips through.
When your attention is split across five places, something always gets missed. You reply too late, forget to follow up, or simply never see it arrive.
Personal WhatsApp, Business WhatsApp, two Gmail inboxes. Each lives somewhere different, with nothing to tie them together into one coherent view.
The same person messages you on WhatsApp and emails you on Gmail. There is no way to see that full relationship history in one single place.
One window for all your messaging, email, and AI. Every service in its own panel. Always one click away.
Ellam is the frame, not the picture. Your data stays between you and your apps, and we never touch your messages.
You saved it somewhere, in your email, your chats, maybe both. You don’t remember where it is. Ellam finds it across your apps instantly.
A built-in note layer that lives across all your apps. Save anything from any app into notebooks you create, so it stays organised, knows its origin, and is easy to find.
Keep things where you expect them, every time you come back. Nothing shifts, nothing gets in your way. No surprises when you come back.
Upgrade only when you need more. Stay on the free plan as long as you like.
A version of Ellam with capabilities that go beyond individual use. So work doesn’t need to be stitched together across tools and systems, and nothing gets lost along the way. Available to a small group of organisations
Yes. You can use Ellam for free with up to 5 apps, one account per app. To add more apps, you can upgrade when you need it.
Yes, on a paid plan. The free plan includes one account per app. Paid plans let you run multiple accounts side by side.
Ellam supports popular messaging and email services like WhatsApp, Telegram, Gmail, Outlook, and Zoho Mail. More services are added over time.
No. Ellam loads the official web versions of each service. Your messages stay with the provider, just like they would in your browser.
You can, but it gets hard to manage. Ellam keeps everything in one place, remembers your sessions, and makes switching between accounts quick and easy.
Yes. Every Ellam installer is code-signed before it reaches you. On macOS, the app is signed with an Apple Developer certificate and notarized by Apple — so Gatekeeper won't block it and you won't see any "unidentified developer" warning. On Windows, the installer is signed with an EV (Extended Validation) code-signing certificate issued to Razorback Technologies Private Limited — the highest trust tier, which means Windows SmartScreen shows the verified publisher name and does not flag it. On Linux, a SHA-256 checksum is published alongside each release so you can independently verify the file hasn't been tampered with.
Rarely — but it can happen, especially on Windows with lesser-known browsers. Our Windows installer is signed with an EV certificate, which eliminates SmartScreen warnings entirely. If your browser still shows a generic "not commonly downloaded" notice, that's just because Ellam is a newer app. The file is safe. You can verify the publisher name in the installer properties before running it: it should read Razorback Technologies Private Limited.
A SHA-256 checksum is published on the download page alongside each Linux build. After downloading, run sha256sum <filename> in your terminal and compare the output against the published hash. If they match, the file is exactly what we shipped — byte for byte.