Tag: Ai-Tools

5 posts tagged with "Ai-Tools"

Polyphon at v0.8.0: The End of the Prototype Phase

Polyphon at v0.8.0: The End of the Prototype Phase

When I shipped Polyphon v0.1.0-alpha.2, session export and a plugin system were next on the roadmap. Today it's v0.8.0, and the features that actually changed how the product feels weren't the ones I planned: voices that interact with real files with per-voice sandboxing, whole-database AES-256 encryption with password protection, and FTS5 search that turns conversation history into working memory. This is the release where Polyphon starts to feel trustworthy for real work.

AI , Automation , Tools
Read more

Polyphon's MCP Server Makes Your AI Ensemble a Native Agent Tool

Polyphon's MCP Server Makes Your AI Ensemble a Native Agent Tool

Polyphon just shipped MCP server support, and it changes the product's role in a developer workflow. Instead of opening Polyphon as a UI you visit deliberately, your coding agent — Claude Code, Cursor, Codex CLI, GitHub Copilot, Windsurf, Gemini CLI — can now call into it directly and broadcast a prompt across your entire Claude + GPT-4o + Gemini ensemble in one shot. Here's what shifted, why the SessionEventSink abstraction made it possible, and when multi-model review is actually worth it.

AI , Automation , Tools
Read more

I Built a Tool So AI Models Could Talk to Each Other

I Built a Tool So AI Models Could Talk to Each Other

Polyphon is a desktop app I shipped this week for orchestrating multiple AI models in a single conversation. Instead of tab-juggling between Claude, GPT, and Gemini, you run all of them as voices in one shared session where they can actually read and respond to each other. Here's why I built it, what technical bets I made, and what I learned on launch day.

AI , Automation , Tools
Read more

Making Your AI Subscriptions Pay for Themselves

Making Your AI Subscriptions Pay for Themselves

Between Claude Pro, ChatGPT Plus, GitHub Copilot, Cursor, and a handful of specialty tools, a serious AI stack can run $100 or more per month. This post explores a practical closed-loop strategy: give every subscription a job, pick one small revenue experiment, and use the tools themselves to generate enough income to cover the bill.

AI , Career , Productivity
Read more