Early access · Private beta

AI agents that run
the boring parts of your day.

Forgeline gives developers a lightweight agent layer over their CLI, browser, and docs — so one sentence replaces ten tabs.

you › summarize the linux.do thread I left open, save to vault
→ agent opened browser, fetched thread JSON, wrote markdown to ~/vault/notes/

One agent. Three surfaces.

Forgeline connects to the tools developers already use — terminal, browser, and notes — through a single MCP-compatible control plane.

⌨️

Shell-native

Runs commands on your machine with a sandboxed workspace root. You stay in control of every write.

🌐

Browser automation

Connects to your existing Chrome profile over CDP — no captcha farms, no re-logins.

📓

Docs in the loop

Treats your Notion, Obsidian, or Markdown vault as first-class memory, not an afterthought.

How it works

01

Install the local agent

A single binary exposes an MCP server on localhost, reading a config in your home directory.

02

Connect your model

Point any MCP-compatible client — Claude, ChatGPT, or Notion AI — at the tunnel we spin up for you.

03

Delegate tasks

Talk to your assistant in natural language. It runs commands, scrapes pages, writes notes — with audit logs.

Built by developers who got tired of copy-pasting.

Forgeline started as an internal tool for managing research workflows across a dozen tabs and terminals. We were spending more time shuffling context than doing the work. So we built a thin agent layer that sits where we already live — bash, Chrome, and our notes.

We believe the next wave of developer productivity is not another dashboard. It's an agent that understands your machine as well as you do, and keeps its hands visible the whole time.

Get early access

We're onboarding a small group of developers for the private beta. Email us and tell us what repetitive thing is eating your day.

forgeline@afaffzzz.com
Forgeline — Remote-first · Est. 2026