atrium

atrium

Shared development environment for humans and agents

S
@sup
Last updated on May 21, 2026
Visit site
11 PeerPush
🔥
Awarded
Trending Now
PeerPush

Details

Follow on
@atrium_dev
Pricing
Free
Platforms
Desktop
Alternative To
WarpiTerm2ClineAAider

About atrium

atrium is a native macOS workspace for running multiple CLI AI coding agents — Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, Cursor CLI, Aider, Cline — side-by-side in a tiling pane layout. Each pane can hold an agent, an embedded web browser, a markdown notes canvas, or a code editor. The entire workspace state persists through crashes and reboots because the data directory is a git repository. Built for the workflow no terminal multiplexer is optimized for: developers running 3-6 parallel AI coding agents on different repos and problems, losing context every time iTerm crashes or a system update reboots their machine. What atrium does specifically: - Spawns and resumes long-running CLI agents in tiled panes. Each agent gets its own persistent session with full history. Survives `cmd+q`, `kill -9`, and unexpected reboots. - Git-backed state recovery: every workspace change is a commit. Force-killing the app and reopening it restores every agent, pane, browser tab, and note to its exact prior state. - Embeds a real web browser as a first-class pane type. Read docs, watch a YouTube tutorial, or check a PR while an agent works alongside. - Markdown canvas pane with a built-in editor for scratch notes, agent prompts, or in-progress drafts. Notes are persisted in plain markdown on disk — no proprietary format. - Full code editor pane (Monaco-based) for direct file editing without leaving the workspace. - Comprehensive CLI: any pane, agent, browser, note, room, or task can be controlled from a script or another agent. atrium can drive itself. - Desktop notifications when an agent needs input or finishes a long task. No more cmd-tabbing every two minutes to check on Claude Code. Real workflow examples: - Run 4 Claude Code sessions on 4 different repos. See them all at once. Get notified when any one needs review. - Have an agent generate code in one pane while you read the official docs in the browser pane next to it. - Stack a markdown canvas with your architecture notes alongside the agent implementing the feature. - Use the CLI to spawn an agent, hand it a task, and walk away. atrium notifies you when it's done. Alternative to: tmux, iTerm2, Warp, Cursor (single-window mode), Cline. atrium is built specifically around the assumption that you're running multiple coding agents in parallel — not just multiple terminal sessions. Constraints, honestly stated: - macOS only. The browser pane, NSEvent integration, and global keybindings depend on AppKit/WKWebView APIs without clean Linux/Windows equivalents. A real port is on the roadmap, not imminent. - Solo dev, ~4 months in. Active development with a release every few days. Bugs exist. - Free during early access. Not monetized yet — figuring out what's worth charging for once the workflows settle. Stack: Tauri + Rust + React. Feedback welcome at https://getatrium.dev or @atrium_dev on X.

Product Insights

atrium is a native macOS developer tool that provides a persistent tiled workspace for running multiple AI coding agents in parallel. It uniquely ensures continuous session recovery by using a git-backed state management system to survive system reboots and crashes.

  • Native macOS application with persistent git-backed state recovery.
  • Tiled layout supporting CLI agents, browsers, markdown notes, and code editors.
  • Comprehensive CLI and desktop notifications for agent management.
  • Completely free pricing during its early access development phase.

Ideal for: Software Developers and AI-Native Engineers who need to manage 3-6 parallel AI coding agents across different repositories simultaneously.

As a specialized agent workspace, it serves as an alternative to tmux, iTerm2, Warp, Cline, and Aider.

Product Video

Watch a video demo of atrium.

Screenshots

Screenshot 1 of atrium

Product Updates (1)

S
@sup

v0.153 — adapter onboarding polish + launcher fixes

v0.153 — adapter onboarding polish + launcher fixes Just shipped v0.153 on stable: - Onboarding flow now scales the adapter picker to 2 columns when you have >6 adapters installed (10+ in my own setup). Easier to scan, no more squinting. - Broken-command detection added to the adapter step: if your `claude` or `codex` CLI is misconfigured at install time, you see an amber warning inline with the exact fix, instead of a silent fail later. - Launcher tile pairing fixed — adapter icons + names now align cleanly across rows. - Bug fixes: picker hydration regression on first launch + a scan-burst CPU spike when many adapters are scanned in parallel. Active development continues — release every few days. Feedback welcome at https://getatrium.dev or via X @atrium_dev.

Product had at the time: 4 upvotes • 0 comments • 2 followers • 11 PeerPush

Comments (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Reviews (2)

Average 5.0 out of 5

5.0

Based on 2 reviews

5
2
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0
Georgebrn

5 star tool, super easy to use and very nice

Comments (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!