Mesh

Mesh is your assistant, in its own panel on the right of every workspace. Ask it anything in plain words, point it at your materials, and it can read them, make things you keep, and remember what helps you work.

Demo clip coming soon
Mesh in a workspace
In Geometry: Mesh open on the right, answering a question about lines of symmetry beside the whiteboard.

Always one panel away

Mesh is the one panel that never leaves. The whiteboard and your content panels fill the rest of the room; Mesh sits on the right and works alongside them. Ask a question and it answers. Ask it to build or change something and it does, then shows you what it did.

Whatever Mesh makes is saved in the workspace, not trapped in the chat. A note, an artifact, a fresh image, a whole map - it lands in the right panel and stays there long after the conversation scrolls away.

Demo clip coming soon
It lands in a panel
Ask Mesh to draft a note on lines of symmetry, and it appears in the Notes panel - not just in the chat.

What it does

Mesh isn't a chatbot off to the side - it works through everything in your workspace. Chat is where you talk to it; the real work lives in your materials, and Mesh can reach into all of it and act on it.

Reads your materialsYour Maps and Topics, Notes, Artifacts, Library Files, and Images. You rarely feed it context; it reaches for what it needs.
Makes things you keepA note you both edit, a finished artifact to read, a generated image, or a whole map of topics for a line of work like Symmetry & Tessellations.
Searches the webFor anything your own materials don't cover - a current fact or fresh reading - with the source links shown.
Draws on the boardDiagrams, sticky notes, and labels, placed as real shapes you can edit - a multi-part answer arrives as one titled frame.

It remembers what helps you

So you never re-explain yourself, Mesh keeps a few short facts about how you work - a private working picture of you, not a transcript. Small, plain facts you can read: your name, that you like worked examples, that rotational symmetry felt shaky last time.

It keeps these facts in four places, broadest to narrowest: User (true in every workspace), Workspace, Map, and Topic. Each fact lives in the one place it belongs - an always-true preference rides at the User level, a topic detail stays with its topic. Read any of them under What Mesh knows, and Forget a whole card whenever you want.

Demo clip coming soon
What Mesh knows
Open What Mesh knows on the Symmetry & Tessellations topic to read its short facts, then Forget the card.

You steer it

Mesh follows what you ask, and a few small controls in the chat box let you aim it exactly - hand it a source for one message, keep something in view for the whole chat, or save an instruction you reuse.

Point at a sourceDrop a library file, note, image, or map into a single message.
Pin to chatKeep up to five sources in view so Mesh uses them for the whole conversation.
CommandsReusable instructions you invoke by name, like a quiz-me prompt, plus built-in /board and /snip to show Mesh the whiteboard.

When a map is active, the chat box takes on a faint green tint - a quiet reminder that your work will flow through that structure.

Where to go next

Two pages go deeper on Mesh - one on the panel you talk to it in, one on how far its reach goes.

The chat panel
Your chats, the working stream, receipts, and every control in the chat box.
What Mesh can do
The full reach across your materials, the web, the board, and memory - and its honest limits.

Tip  Just ask, in plain words - Mesh can already reach your whole workspace, so you rarely have to set anything up first.