InVideo Agent One supports same-project edits on phone, tablet, and desktop
Creator demos show InVideo Agent One carrying the same project conversation across desktop, phone, and tablet, so edits continue away from the workstation. Mid-process creative notes and shot changes can now be applied without rebuilding project context.

TL;DR
- CharaspowerAI's main demo shows InVideo Agent One carrying the same project conversation from desktop to phone, with the creator adding new shot notes mid-commute instead of waiting to get back to a workstation.
- According to CharaspowerAI's follow-up, the same project can be reopened on phone, tablet, or desktop without restarting the brief, which turns continuity into the actual feature, not just video generation.
- On InVideo's official homepage, Agent One is pitched around long-term project memory, and the site says its agents store a project's full context so clips stay consistent across edits.
- Anima_Labs' short film post frames Agent One as a production-chain assistant that can test edits, storyboards, and suggestions in real time, which is a bigger claim than simple prompt-to-video generation.
You can watch CharaspowerAI's phone handoff demo, browse InVideo's Agent One homepage, and see a separate creator use it for an AI short film workflow. There is also a public AI app entrypoint, while a short YouTube walkthrough points to notebook and context tabs inside the product.
Cross-device continuity
The clearest reveal in the evidence is not a new effect or generation mode. It is that the same in-progress project survives the jump from desktop to phone.
In CharaspowerAI's post, the creator says a new stadium idea for a World Cup-inspired kombucha campaign came up on a tram, then got pushed into the same Agent One project from mobile. The follow-up post adds that the conversation can continue on tablet too.
That lines up with the way the workflow is described: new creative notes, same project, same context. For video teams used to rebuilding prompts or passing notes between tools, that is the practical shift.
Project memory
InVideo's official homepage describes Agent One as an AI video platform for "serious creatives" and says its agents store each project's full context in long-term memory. The same page pitches consistency as the core benefit: fewer repeated instructions, more stable clips across a campaign.
That official framing matches the creator language in CharaspowerAI's thread, where Agent One is described less like a one-shot generator and more like a collaborator that reasons through changes, adapts, and keeps the project moving after the user leaves the desk.
A separate YouTube walkthrough also points to notebook and context tabs, which suggests the persistent-memory pitch is built into the product surface, not just the marketing copy.
Production-chain workflows
The other useful data point is how creators are framing the tool when they are not talking about device switching. In Anima_Labs' short film example, Agent One is presented as something that can manage the production chain of a short film while testing edits, storyboards, and suggestions in real time.
That is close to what AIwithSynthia's reply calls the real scaling question: maintaining quality and consistency across a whole campaign, not just making one strong asset. If cross-device continuity holds up in wider use, the feature matters because it keeps that campaign context alive while the project is still moving.
You can try the public InVideo app directly, and InVideo's main site is the destination Anima_Labs linked from the post.