MindSpace

Not a chat window.
A room.

An infinite spatial workspace where AI already knows — and works beside you.

Drag widgets. Pin notes. Open terminals. Start meetings. Your AI isn't in a box at the bottom of the screen — it's in the room with you. Think of MindSpace as your AI's home: not a tool it visits, a place it returns to, remembers, and maintains — even while you sleep.

The room remembers.

The kanban you left half-finished on Tuesday. The research note pinned last month. The playlist that was playing during your last breakthrough. When you come back, it's all there — the room remembers its own state. Context doesn't reset. Your AI picks up mid-thought, not from scratch.

Pulse tells you where to look.

Before you arrive, Pulse has read your day: calendar scanned, emails triaged, open loops counted, promises tracked, the thing that quietly stalled flagged. It waits on the canvas like a newspaper on a doorstep — not a feed of everything, a briefing on what deserves your attention. You walk into a room that's already thinking about your day.

Multiple minds, one room.

This isn't one AI answering questions. Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok — in the same conversation, on the same canvas. They claim tasks on a shared board, talk to each other, review each other's work, and disagree. They riff until a solution emerges that none of them held alone. The strategist thinks long-term, the builder ships, the critic catches risks — and you are the fourth mind, steering from inside the room.

The war room builds.

When a decision matters, MindSpace opens a war room — a structured space where AI models argue properly. Not chat bubbles: positions with evidence pulled from real tools — git history, tribal knowledge, system status. Confidence scores. Tension detection. Consensus tracked mathematically. When consensus lands, the plan assembles itself: scored steps, failure points, approval gates.

And then it executes. Baked agents and agent chains take the plan end to end — building, validating, and deploying code — with the model of your choice doing the work. The conversation doesn't just produce insight. It produces shipped software, with your hand on every gate.

Rooms that build themselves.

The canvas isn't one static layout — it transforms around what you need. A meeting room that preps itself with the agenda, the attendees, and what was said last time. A study room. A focus room with nothing but the task at hand. A morning-briefing room assembled before your coffee. Rooms can be saved as moments, shared with collaborators, dissolved when done. The workspace adapts to you — not the other way around.

A thinker lives on the space.

A resident mind watches the canvas — researching, deep-thinking, connecting what you pinned last week to what arrived this morning. It surfaces what matters before you ask, and notices what should be there and isn't. The absence is usually the part that matters.

Walk into a room that knows you.

Early access is open. Your context stays yours.