For developers inside agencies
Run every agent. See who needs you. Ship faster.
MoggingLabs Workspace is the command center for developers building internal tools, automations, and agents for clients. Every AI coding agent in one fast, multi-pane terminal, on your machine, under your own logins. No learning curve, and early access is free.
Free in early access · Local-first · Windows + macOS + Linux · No learning curve
MoggingLabs Workspace · client-portal
The problem
Client work is fast. Everything around it is slow.
01
Scattered across the cloud.
Slack pings, ClickUp tickets, Make.com scenarios, three client repos. The work lives everywhere, and you're the glue holding it together.
02
Agents you babysit.
Fan out coding agents across windows and tabs and you can't tell which one is blocked, waiting on you, or quietly done.
03
Tools that fight back.
Heavy platforms with heavy learning curves steal back the hours they promised to save. Client work can't wait for onboarding.
Watch it work
Watch sixteen agents work, and watch one ask for you.
Every pane is a live agent under your own login: the client portal, the Slack digest, the intake form. When one needs input, its pane rings orange, its workspace lights up with a count, and a toast points you straight to it. Nothing else stutters.
MoggingLabs Workspace · internal-tools
4×4 · 16/16 panes on WebGL
Features
Built for the person running the agents.
Know who needs you. Instantly.
Per-pane busy / idle / needs-you state, and a live count of how many panes are waiting on you. Event-driven, never polled.
Sixteen agents, one glance.
Grid layouts from 1 to 16, drag-to-resize splits, keyboard pane nav, maximize and zoom.
Close the lid. Pick up where you left off.
Named, persistent workspaces restore your grid, working dirs, and relaunch your agents.
Every command, blocked and searchable.
Collapsible command blocks with exit-code color and timestamps.
Branch and dirty state, on every pane.
Read-only per-pane git, always in view.
Automate everything.
A documented control CLI: mogging send, send-key, list, capture, notify. Wire it into CI or an automation scenario.
Agent awareness
Never lose an agent again.
You run agents in parallel; the hard part is knowing which one stopped for you. MoggingLabs Workspace reads each pane’s state from the terminal itself and rolls it up per workspace as a number, so you can see who needs you at a glance instead of hunting through tabs. It only gets loud when something actually needs your input.
Reliability
Rock-solid rendering. Provably.
Sixteen live agents streaming at once: ~140 fps average, worst frame gap ~28 ms, ~38 MB of memory, every visible pane on the GPU. That budget is asserted by an automated test in CI on every release. One Chromium engine runs the terminal identically on Windows, macOS, and Linux, and your agents live in a separate process, so a UI hiccup never takes them down.
Neutrality
Your keys. Your CLIs. Your machine.
You bring the official CLIs and your own logins; MoggingLabs Workspace just arranges and coordinates them. We never store, proxy, or meter your provider credentials, never push our own model, and take no cut of your AI usage. Free and local-first, by design.
Integrations
Built to plug into the agency stack.
Workspace already runs the agents. The integrations bring the rest of your cloud to the same screen: automations, documents, deploys, tickets, and notifications, wired to your panes.
Trigger self-hosted workflows from your panes, and let agents build new ones against your instance.
Sheets, Docs, and Drive within the agent's reach: client data in, deliverables out.
Agent notifications where your team already lives. When a pane needs you, the right channel knows.
Finished work becomes a pull request, and review lands back in the pane that wrote it.
Kick off and track preview deploys from the same pane that shipped the code.
Point agents at schema, auth, and edge functions without leaving the grid.
Build against client pipelines and automations your agency already runs.
Tasks become agent prompts; finished work reports back to the ticket.
Trigger scenarios straight from the control socket, from a notify call to any webhook.
Also on the list
- Cloudflare
- AWS
- Microsoft Azure
- Sentry
- PostHog
- Stripe
- Shopify
- Zapier
- Jira
- Discord
- Twilio
- Docker
- Postman
- Notion
- Figma
- WordPress
- Airtable
- Tally
- Typeform
- Jotform
- Fillout
Generative media, for the creative side of client work
- Higgsfield
- fal.ai
- Kie.ai
- Midjourney
- Replicate
- Runway
- ElevenLabs
- Stability AI
- Leonardo.Ai
In development. Early-access users get each integration first and set the order they ship in.
Trust & privacy
We never see your code. We never touch your keys. We take no cut.
Local-first: your workspaces stay on your machine.
No cloud dependency, and no telemetry you didn't opt into.
Agents run under your own auth; credentials never reach us.
Signed and notarized for Windows and macOS; Linux ships on the same auto-update feed.
Pricing
Free in early access. Paid at launch.
While Workspace is in early access it costs nothing: no credits, no metering, no cut of your AI spend. The launch plans are public, flat-priced, and locked at the rate you join on.
Free
for the whole early-access period
- All 16-pane layouts, workspaces, attention counts
- Every supported agent CLI, plus custom commands
- The scriptable control socket, included
- Agency-stack integrations as they ship
- A direct line to the people building it
Launch plans: Free, Pro at $19/mo, Agency at $39 per user, with annual discounts. Details on the pricing page.
I build internal tools at an agency. Is this for me?
Yes, that's exactly who it's for: developers shipping internal tools, automations, and agents for clients, usually across several projects at once. Workspace keeps every agent and every project on one screen.
Which agents does it work with?
Claude Code, OpenAI Codex, Gemini CLI, Aider, OpenCode, plus any custom command. It hosts the official CLIs as real subprocesses.
When do the n8n, Google Workspace, and Slack integrations land?
They're in development and roll out to early-access users first, with n8n and Google Workspace leading the queue. The full named roster, from the core nine tiles to the Cloudflare-to-PostHog list and the generative-media set led by Higgsfield, fal.ai, and Kie.ai, is in the integrations section above and on the roadmap. Join early access and you help set the order.
Do you see my code or my API keys?
No. Agents run under your own login on your machine. We never store, proxy, or meter your credentials.
What does it cost?
Early access is free, with no credits and no metering. At public launch the plans are Free, Pro at $19 a month ($15 annual), and Agency at $39 per user ($32 annual), all flat-priced and locked at the rate you join on. Full details are on the pricing page.
Does it work on Windows?
Yes. Behavior is identical on Windows, macOS, and Linux by design, because one engine renders the terminal on all three.
How reliable is it under load?
Sixteen agents at ~140 fps with zero frames past 100 ms at the v0.4.0 release audit. The budget behind it (30 fps floor, 150 ms worst-gap cap) is asserted by automated tests on Windows, macOS, and Linux CI.
Is there a learning curve?
If you've used a terminal, you already know how to use it. The wizard picks a folder, a layout, and your agents, and you're running in one move. Everything else stays out of the way until a pane needs you.
Can I script it?
Yes. There's a documented control CLI (send, send-key, list, capture, notify) you can wire into CI, a cron job, or an automation scenario, and a first-party MCP server that lets agents drive the built-in browser with your consent. The Automation docs cover all of it.
Is my data private?
Local-first: your work stays on your machine, with opt-in telemetry only. When accounts arrive at launch they handle licensing only; your code and keys never touch them.
Is it open source?
No. Workspace is proprietary software, and it's free. The app, your workspaces, and your keys all live on your machine, and we never see them.
Bring your agents home.
Your keys, your CLIs, one command center. Rock-solid on Windows, macOS, and Linux.
Free in early access · Local-first · Windows + macOS + Linux