Model your domain as entities; Koan composes storage, web, AI and jobs - and tells you exactly what it did.
Discover, name, trust and serve - one cross-platform binary. No accounts, no cloud.
Governed access to your own browser, for AI agents. Engine open and free; pay only for governance.
Repurposed hardware becomes quiet infrastructure - request services by type, never by hostname.
Opt-in power tools for Koan.
Small Rust crates: one symmetric API over divergent platform mechanisms.
A cognitive-architecture canon for artificial companions.
A breathing companion you hold, not watch.
A .NET 10 framework. You describe your domain as plain entities; Koan reads them and composes the infrastructure around them - persistence, HTTP, jobs, AI - then reports exactly what it stood up and why. No hidden magic to reverse-engineer.
The missing LAN toolbox. Find services by what they are rather than by hostname, give them names that stick, establish trust between them, and serve your own - all from one binary that works when the internet doesn't.
Agents increasingly need to drive a real, logged-in browser. Ghostlight gives them governed access to yours. Personal use, solo devs, open-source maintainers: the engine is open source and free, forever. Teams that need governance - policy, audit, delightful control over how agents use the browser - pay only for that layer, never for autonomy. It never phones home, even commercially.
Old laptops, thin clients and Raspberry Pis become a coordinated mesh of services. You ask for what you need by type; Zen Garden finds it. Infrastructure you can hold, on hardware that was headed for a landfill.
A companion to Koan for teams who want to reach further - additional capabilities you opt into, never defaults forced on you. It extends the stack without complicating the base.
A set of small Rust crates that paper over the places where operating systems disagree - one symmetric API where each platform otherwise demands its own. Little tools, honestly scoped.
Early research: a canon of ideas for how an artificial companion might be structured to remember, attend, and hold a coherent sense of self over time. A direction, honestly labelled - not a product.
Early research: a companion designed to be held rather than stared at - something that breathes in your hand and asks nothing of a screen. Exploratory, and honest about being so.