Triage the backlog and review PRs from chat.
Triage the backlog, review PRs, and close out sprints from chat. One setup, any agent.
Triage open issues and review the PRs waiting on me.
- 1Triage new GitHub issues by severity
- 2Review open PRs and leave first-pass comments
- 3Post a sprint status to the team channel
- 4Draft release notes from merged workdone
Remembers your repo conventions and review style.
Works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor — bring your own agent.
Switch agents.
Keep everything.
Your apps, memory, voice, and policy logic travel with your agent — not with the app you run it in. Move from Claude Code to Codex and nothing resets.
Plus your memory, writing voice, and policy rules — kept exactly as you left them.
Give your agent
the real world.
One setup, and it stops talking — and starts doing.
Questions, answered.
No. That's the setup tax CoreSpeed removes. You authorize once through OAuth and your agent gets access to every connector and built-in tool — no per-service applications, accounts, or keys.
Never. We connect to services through OAuth 2.0 only. You grant access on each provider's own screen, and we receive scoped tokens — not credentials.
Nothing is lost. Your auth, memory, voice, and policy logic are portable — move from Claude Code to Codex (or anything else) and your whole setup travels with you.
You describe intent in plain English, then CoreSpeed turns it into policy logic that runs before an action executes. It sees the request in context — tool, recipient, content, budget, and saved memory — and decides whether to approve it automatically, require review, or block it with a reason. Policies can be deterministic rules, an LLM/classifier judge, or both, enforced server-side.
Anytime. Pull any single connector, export your data, or delete everything. Control stays with you.
Any of them. Claude, Codex, OpenClaw, Hermes, Cursor, and custom agents — bring your own. CoreSpeed is the access layer underneath.