Launched this week

Pazi
Vibe code business operations
1.1K followers
Vibe code business operations
1.1K followers
Pazi is an AI team for that idea you keep coming back to — a book, a shop, an app, a skill you want to sell. Tell Pazi what you're trying to do and it builds a team of agents around your idea and starts making things happen: a website, first outreach, content, the next step. Every time you come back, something has moved. You stay in control; your team does the rest alongside you, one real step at a time. Like vibe coding but for business operations.







Congrats on the launch! "Every time you come back, something has moved" is the angle that sold me — most agent tools still just sit and wait for prompts. Curious how you balance agents acting autonomously vs. asking for approval on things like outreach?
Pythagora
@alex_tomilin Thanks, Alex! The main boundary is the opportunity itself: you choose what the team should pursue, then the agents work autonomously within that direction. They come back when they need access, credentials, or a decision that materially changes the plan. For outreach, you can shape the approach upfront and then let the team execute without approving every individual step.
@leon_ostrez got it, thanks for clarification!)
Pythagora
@alex_tomilin You are welcome! Let me know if you have any other questions
The strongest part of this is focusing on the loop after the build. For founder work, I would want every agent step to leave a trail: assumption, action taken, result, next choice, and where it stopped for approval. That is what keeps “business operations” from turning into busy-looking motion.
Pazi
@krekeltronics Yes, agreed! The question is how to show that in the most concise way so people actually want to review it.
Pythagora
@olkoef Thank you! Pazi currently runs on cloud/API models. Local or self-hosted models aren’t supported yet—we’d need to ensure they can reliably use Pazi’s tools and memory before opening that up. But it’s definitely an interesting direction.
Congratulations on the Launch🎉🎉. Visited your website, absolutely loved the interface and functions, i am just worried about AI Hallucination, and what can be done to prevent it?
Pythagora
@shahzeb7711 Thank you! Hallucinations are a real limitation of every LLM, but clear goals and instructions, combined with verification and review from other agents, help reduce them.
For me personally, coding is the easiest part of building a product, but content writing or marketing-related tasks are really too difficult. They are often the parts that take me the most time. The appearance of Pazi just helped me out 🥳, thank you so much!!
Pythagora
Thank you, Gary! That’s exactly the gap we built Pazi for. Building the product is often only the beginning—content, marketing, and distribution can take far more time. We’re excited to see what your Pazi team helps you move forward 🥳
The "flag low confidence before asking for approval" question above is the crux of this whole category, I think. I've been building something adjacent (an AI Chief of Staff for founders running more than one business) and the hardest part by far wasn't the automation, it was getting the system to admit when it's unsure instead of presenting a guess with the same confidence as a verified fact. Once I added explicit confidence grading instead of a single "done" state, trust from actual users went up more than any new capability did. Curious whether Pazi's course-correction messages to users distinguish "this failed" from "this succeeded but I'm not fully sure why," those feel like very different signals.
GrowMeOrganic
How does Pazi decide what to work on first if someone has five different priorities competing for attention?
Pazi
@iamanantgupta in most cases, you are the one who chooses the direction but in smaller cases where it needs to make a decision, it does with the best of its abilities. We're using Opus and Sonnet in the background so the decisions I've seen so far are amazing - I'd say better than most people today
@iamanantgupta This is the question I care about most too. I run three unrelated businesses and the hard part was never doing the work, it's knowing which of five competing things actually deserves me right now. What's helped me isn't a smarter ranking algorithm, it's honesty about confidence, some days I'm sure the café schedule is the real fire, other days I'm wrong and it's actually the software bug queue. Curious if Pazi surfaces why it picked one priority over another, or if that reasoning is still mostly a black box for now.
Pythagora
@iamanantgupta @stacywycof83995 Great distinction. Pazi’s COO considers your goals, current progress, results, and blockers. When choosing which opportunity to pursue, you make the final call. If you’re unsure which direction to take, you can always discuss it with your COO first.