Use cases

One prompt.
An afternoon, replaced.

The day-to-day moments where Gods Eye stops being a tool and starts feeling like a teammate who never gets tired and never asks for credit.

Friday, 4:00pm

A bug ticket lands. By 4:09 the fix is shipped.

Paste the stack trace. Gods Eye reads the file, finds the off-by-one, edits it, runs the failing test, opens the PR. Σ 9 min from ticket to merge-ready.

Stack traceAuto-fixTests passPR opened
Time to PR
9m
From "what is this trace?" to a green PR. Average across 100 internal tickets.
Sunday, 11pm

"Make the deck the partner asked for. By breakfast."

Drop the dataset. Tell Gods Eye what story to tell. Walk away. Wake up to twelve polished slides — charts, narrative, brand fonts — already saved as .pptx.

PPT skillExcel parsingBrand-safe
Monday, 10am · 40-file refactor

Reshape a codebase without reading 40 files.

"Extract the auth flow into its own module." Gods Eye walks the call graph, rewrites imports, updates the tests, runs the suite, commits cleanly. You review the diff the same way you'd review a senior engineer's PR.

Tree-sitter awareAtomic commitsReviewable diff
00:00
Read auth/* · 412 lines
00:14
Walked call graph · 38 sites
00:42
Edited 40 files in place
02:11
247/247 tests pass
02:18
PR #1284 opened
Whenever you need a second pair of eyes

A team of agents. One tap to assemble.

Claude drafts the migration. Codex reviews it. Idaus runs the test suite locally. Gemini writes the changelog. They hand off automatically. You watch the office view animate.

4-agent teamAuto handoffPixel-office view
30,000 ft · no Wi-Fi

Build, on a flight. No internet, no problem.

Idaus runs entirely on your Mac. Refactor, write, reason — at cruising altitude. When you land and reconnect, the cloud models pick up exactly where Idaus left off.

Local IdausOffline-firstSeamless handoff
FL 350 · airplane mode
100%
on-device inference
Idaus● running
The morning of the diligence call

Audit your repo before the round.

"Find every TODO. Score the risky changes. Rank by blast radius." Ninety seconds later you have a copy-paste-able report ready for the technical due-dilligence room.

Repo-wide searchRisk scoringMarkdown export
Repo audit · 90s
P0payments/refund.ts:118
P1auth/session.ts:42
P1sync/queue.ts:201
P2ui/Modal.tsx:8
+ 11 more · ranked by blast radius
The new hire's first afternoon

Onboarding, in a single afternoon.

Drop a new engineer in front of Gods Eye. The Skills Hub guides them through the codebase, answers questions in context, runs the dev server, helps them ship a first PR by dinner. The Confluence wiki finally has competition.

Code tourInline answersFirst PR by 6pm
Onboarding · Day 1

Shipped first PR

87% complete5h 12m
Every night, 3:00am

Scheduled tasks while you sleep.

Cron a 3am summary of overnight Sentry errors with a fix proposal next to each. Cron a Monday digest of every PR opened against your repos. Wake to a daily briefing, not an inbox.

Cron-style scheduleIdle-time inferenceMarkdown reports
active · daily 03:00
@daily 03:00
summarise overnight Sentry errors
→ propose fix per issue
→ write to ~/Reports/sentry/{date}.md
The "wait, it remembered?" moment

Three weeks off. Open the lid. "Where we left off…"

Came back from a holiday. Opened Gods Eye. Before I typed anything it said last touched 3w ago "you were fixing Stripe webhook idempotency, and you mentioned you prefer tabs." Pulled up the file. Ready to continue. The whole vault is plain markdown in Obsidian — I can read it, even edit it.

Obsidian-compatiblePlain .md vaultSurvives every restart
~/GodsEyeVault/projects/
3w checkout.md
5d auth-refactor.md
2d dashboard-v2.md
It read these on launch. So did you.
The Sunday-night sub audit

"I cancelled Cursor, Copilot, Cline in the same week."

Plug your existing Claude Pro / ChatGPT Plus / Gemini Advanced key into Gods Eye. That's it. No markup, no proxy, no per-token surprise bill. The app itself is free and open-source. The math people quietly do — −$45/mo on average — is real, not a marketing line.

BYO API key$0 markupApache-2.0
monthly · before / after
Cursor $20
Copilot $10
Cline credits $15
Gods Eye $0
monthly delta −$45
The "I edited the brain" trick

Open Obsidian. Cross out a wrong fact. Done.

The agent memory is a folder of markdown files on your laptop. So you can pop open Obsidian (or any text editor), correct something, add a constraint — "never use Tailwind, we use UnoCSS" — save. Next session, the agent reads the change. No retraining, no system prompt fiddling. Just type the truth.

You own the brainEdit by handDiff-friendly
~/GodsEyeVault/preferences.md
## Code style
- We use Tailwind
+ We use UnoCSS
- Tabs over spaces
- Single quotes in JS
## Architecture
- Electron main / renderer split
- IPC via /common/adapter/ipcBridge
// agent will obey this on next session
The Tuesday-morning miracle

"It opened my Sentry, found the cause, and proposed the fix."

Production alert lands. "Look at the last 50 errors in Sentry, group them, find the actual root cause." Five minutes later: a markdown report with the rogue commit identified, the failing assertion explained, and a one-line fix — already on a branch waiting for review. The kind of thing senior engineers quietly tell other senior engineers about.

Sentry · Datadog · LogsRoot-cause analysisFix on a branch
incident · 06:14am
grouped 47 errors
root commit a7f2c91
cause: missing null-check on user.org
→ branch hotfix/null-org · ready

The work was always small.
The friction was the work.

Gods Eye removes the friction. What's left is what you actually wanted to do.

Get Gods Eye