How workrooms work
A workroom is your own private cloud environment where your AI employee builds things for you — you describe what you want in plain words and watch it come to life.
Why workrooms are isolated
Every tenant gets its own dedicated workroom — a private cloud container running the AI coding environment. It is not a shared space: your data, your connected accounts, and the work your AI employee produces never sit alongside another company’s.
Isolation is the whole point. Because each workroom is a separate container, your credentials and files cannot leak into someone else’s environment, and theirs cannot reach yours. Within your organisation, each user also gets their own isolated area, so people’s projects stay neatly separated.
This means you can connect real business tools and real data to your AI employee with confidence. The boundary around your workroom is enforced by the platform, not left to convention.
What lives in a workroom
A workroom holds your projects: the files your AI employee creates and edits, from documents and reports to fully working apps and websites.
You work by describing what you want in plain language. The AI employee plans the task, writes and runs the work live inside the workroom, and you watch it happen step by step rather than handing off and waiting.
Your files persist on a workspace storage share that is mounted into the workroom, so your work is still there the next time you open a session — nothing is lost when a session ends.
Isolation & your data
Your workroom is a per-tenant container with its own boundary. By default it can reach the public internet, but it has no path into another customer’s environment, and no other customer has a path into yours.
Any keys or credentials you connect are tied to your tenant or to your user account, never shared across the platform. Combined with per-user isolation inside your organisation, this keeps each person’s work and access cleanly separated.
From workroom to published App
When your AI employee builds something — a dashboard, a tool, a small website — you can preview it live before anyone else sees it, and ask for changes until it is right.
Once you are happy, you publish it as an App. Publishing turns the work inside your private workroom into something you can share and use, while the workroom itself stays your private workspace for continuing to build and refine.