Felix turns loose ends into approved actions.
Tap Fix. Done.
An ask you haven't replied to. A flight scattered across three threads. A note you'll forget. An action an agent wants to take. Felix shows one card — "Add this?" "Draft this?" "Save this?" "Sync this?" — and writes to the right system when you tap. Signed receipt. One-tap undo.
Three things, that's it.
- Send Felix anything. Forward an email. Paste a Slack thread. Voice-capture a thought. Screenshot a confirmation. Felix turns each into one Fix card with the right next action — a draft reply, a calendar add, a saved fact, an assembled trip.
- Trips that share themselves. Flights, hotels, dinners — Felix clusters fragments into one trip. Send the link to a friend. They see a beautiful canonical truth, claim their own Felix handle, and join. Their calendar updates.
- The handle. You get
yourname@felix.app. People — and agents — send things to it. Felix is the one place commitments become done.
Built for the agentic web, too.
Every action Claude, Cursor, Goose, or any agent takes through Felix produces a signed receipt. Felix is the consent + audit + undo layer the agentic web needs — owned by you, not by any one model provider. If you build agents →
No app windows.
Felix lives in your menu bar and a notch pop-down (⌘⇧F). It only appears when there's something to fix. The long tail is here on the web: receipts, autopilot rules, agent grants. Nothing else.
What Felix never does.
Felix opens compose windows. Felix never sends. Sensitive content always asks before it surfaces. Every action carries a signed receipt and a 24-hour Undo. The seven discipline rules are in the source.