Why we don’t sell an agent.
Three or four times a month, someone asks if WireNet has its own agent. It doesn’t. That isn’t a gap in the roadmap — it’s the point.
The question we keep getting.
Three or four times a month, in some variant, someone asks us: ‘so what’s the WireNet agent like? does it run in the browser? is it good at PDFs?’ We give the same answer every time, and the answer keeps surprising people.
We don’t have one. We don’t want one. The agents are already there.
Teams already live in the agents they have.
The teams we work with already live inside Codex or Claude Code or Cowork. They have rituals and shortcuts and skills and pet workflows. We do not show up and ask them to leave the surface they’re productive in. We show up, listen for two weeks, cut a spine, and host the MCP their existing agents talk to. The surface stays. The chaos behind the surface gets a backbone.
What the right business looks like.
If we sold an agent we’d be in the wrong business. The wrong business is competing with frontier labs on quality of base models. The right business is being the thing that makes their output durable. There is, structurally, more of the second to do every quarter than there is of the first — and almost nobody is doing it.