Launching today

AgentGrid
Your AI agents team, terminals, notes: one infinite canvas
25 followers
Your AI agents team, terminals, notes: one infinite canvas
25 followers
Your AI coding agents, visible on one persistent infinite canvas. Spawn role-based workers (builder, QA, reviewer, devops) and an orchestrator runs the build, review, fix, validate loop while you steer. Terminals, browsers, notes and git live beside your agents, so checking on your AI is a glance, not an interrogation. Your whole workspace persists across restarts: every agent, session and pane restored where you left it. Works with Claude Code and Codex, locally. macOS, Linux and Windows.






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Launch Team / Built With


Hey Product Hunt! 👋 Michael here, maker of AgentGrid.
The true origin: my co-founder Souren built AgentGrid to replicate himself. He was running so many coding agents there was no sane way to manage them all. It took him a MONTH to convince me to use it.
What converted me was restart anxiety.
Every system update meant losing all my Claude Code sessions. AgentGrid saves your entire workspace: every agent, every session, mapped visually on a 2D canvas. Restart, reopen, everything's exactly where you left it. I haven't lost a session since, and honestly we don't talk about that feature enough.
Once I was in, the rest clicked: an infinite canvas where your agents are panes you can watch. You spawn role-based workers (builder, QA, reviewer, devops…), and an orchestrator agent runs the loop: build → review → fix → validate, while you steer and take the final review.
Terminals, browsers, code, git and notes live on the same canvas, so "what is my AI doing?" is a glance, not an interrogation.
The part I love most: AgentGrid launched itself. The gallery images above, the outreach research, and the first draft of this comment were produced by an orchestrator and its workers running on the canvas. While I slept.
Works with Claude Code and Codex today, on macOS, Linux and Windows.
It's free during early access: grab it at https://agentgrid.sh.
And if you show up today and tell us what to build next, you're a founding user in our book: your feedback goes straight onto the roadmap, and there's a founding-user role waiting in our Discord.
I'll be here all day. Tell me what's confusing, what's missing, and what you'd want your agent team to do first. Honest teardowns especially welcome. 🙏
PageAI
@michael_yagudaev congrats on the launch, this looks awesome guys!
@dan_mindru thanks so much Dan :). I am legit excited to see how you use it and what you build with it
@michael_yagudaev @dan_mindru Awesome to see you here Dan!!
Souren here! The co-founder who built this to replicate himself LOL
The honest version: I was running so many coding agents at once that I lost track of what was building what. Terminal tabs everywhere. No idea which agent was stuck, which was done, which was quietly burning tokens on the wrong file. I didn't need a better chatbot, I needed to SEE my team.
So I built the canvas. Agents as panes you can watch. A builder here, a QA there, an orchestrator keeping the loop moving, my terminals and browsers sitting right next to them. And the whole workspace survives restarts, which is the feature that finally converted Michael after a month of me pestering him haha
The wildest part for me: My job was mostly reviewing PRs and saying "ship it".
It's free during early access: https://agentgrid.sh
I want your brutal take. What's confusing, what's missing, and what's the first thing you'd have your agent team build? I'm in the comments all day.
The infinite canvas makes juggling multiple agents feel way less chaotic than switching tabs. Restoration across restarts works exactly as advertised, came back and everything was right where I left it.
@naimej1tx I am so happy that you found AgentGrid useful!
the infinite canvas framing for multiple agent terminals is a good fit for how messy multi-agent work actually looks in practice. when two agents on the same canvas need to reference each other's output (one's notes inform the other's next terminal command), is that a manual copy-paste between panes or is there some shared context layer connecting them
The infinite canvas actually makes it feel like supervising a small team instead of babysitting a terminal. Persistence across restarts is the killer feature, glad I don't have to relaunch everything every morning.
@iuraf1721 Thank you :). What are you making now?