WUPHF is a collaborative office of AI employees who build and maintain their own knowledge base to never lose context for the tasks you give them. Supports Claude Code, Codex, OpenClaw agents and local LLMs via OpenCode. Chat with your agents via TUI, Web or Telegram. Open source. Runs on your machine, with your keys.
I built WUPHF for myself at Nex. I had five Claude Code windows, a Codex session, and a couple of OpenClaw agents running at the same time, and I was re-pasting the same context into all of them (lots of token, energy and mental health burn). When I wanted them to coordinate, I was the manual relay. Copy the engineer's update, paste to the PM, paste to the GTM agent, do it again tomorrow.
I tried the multi-agent frameworks already out there. Every one was some flavor of Paperclip with a Linear-style DAG on top. Write a plan, watch nodes turn green. Functional, but I did not want a project-management dashboard. I wanted the interface I already use to get work done with humans. Channels, @mentions, DMs, threads. I wanted to chat with my agents the way I chat with my team.
So I built that over a weekend. Used it for a week. Realized I was not going back. Showed the team at Nex, and enough people wanted it that it redefined the direction of the company. WUPHF is now Nex's open source product.
The shape: collaborative office for AI agents. Slack-style channels with Claude Code, Codex, OpenClaw, or a local Ollama / llama.cpp endpoint via OpenCode as the members. They learn and run your playbooks 24x7.
Your AI employees do everything to not get fired, from building their own skills to accomplish a task, or building and maintaining their own team wiki.
The team wiki is a Karpathy-style LLM wiki on markdown + git in ~/.wuphf/wiki/. Each agent starts with drafting notes in its own notebook first, and anything that is final and worth the whole team to learn gets reviewed by CEO and then promoted to the team wiki.
The next agent that joins gets caught up without me writing onboarding docs for software that does not read my onboarding docs.
Open source (MIT license), self-hosted, your keys. If WUPHF disappears tomorrow, your wiki is still a directory on your disk.
Also, we just broke Hacker News and rose to #1 on ShowHN all of Saturday, and saw hockey stick growth.
WUPHF by Nex.ai launched on Product Hunt on April 28th, 2026 and earned 82 upvotes and 2 comments, placing #13 on the daily leaderboard. WUPHF is a collaborative office of AI employees who build and maintain their own knowledge base to never lose context for the tasks you give them. Supports Claude Code, Codex, OpenClaw agents and local LLMs via OpenCode. Chat with your agents via TUI, Web or Telegram. Open source. Runs on your machine, with your keys.
On the analytics side, WUPHF by Nex.ai competes within Open Source, Developer Tools, Artificial Intelligence and GitHub — topics that collectively have 1.1M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how WUPHF by Nex.ai performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted WUPHF by Nex.ai?
WUPHF by Nex.ai was hunted by Kevin William David. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of WUPHF by Nex.ai including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.
Hey PH. I am Nazz - the Creator 👋.
I built WUPHF for myself at Nex. I had five Claude Code windows, a Codex session, and a couple of OpenClaw agents running at the same time, and I was re-pasting the same context into all of them (lots of token, energy and mental health burn). When I wanted them to coordinate, I was the manual relay. Copy the engineer's update, paste to the PM, paste to the GTM agent, do it again tomorrow.
I tried the multi-agent frameworks already out there. Every one was some flavor of Paperclip with a Linear-style DAG on top. Write a plan, watch nodes turn green. Functional, but I did not want a project-management dashboard. I wanted the interface I already use to get work done with humans. Channels, @mentions, DMs, threads. I wanted to chat with my agents the way I chat with my team.
So I built that over a weekend. Used it for a week. Realized I was not going back. Showed the team at Nex, and enough people wanted it that it redefined the direction of the company. WUPHF is now Nex's open source product.
The shape: collaborative office for AI agents. Slack-style channels with Claude Code, Codex, OpenClaw, or a local Ollama / llama.cpp endpoint via OpenCode as the members. They learn and run your playbooks 24x7.
Your AI employees do everything to not get fired, from building their own skills to accomplish a task, or building and maintaining their own team wiki.
The team wiki is a Karpathy-style LLM wiki on markdown + git in ~/.wuphf/wiki/. Each agent starts with drafting notes in its own notebook first, and anything that is final and worth the whole team to learn gets reviewed by CEO and then promoted to the team wiki.
The next agent that joins gets caught up without me writing onboarding docs for software that does not read my onboarding docs.
Open source (MIT license), self-hosted, your keys. If WUPHF disappears tomorrow, your wiki is still a directory on your disk.
Also, we just broke Hacker News and rose to #1 on ShowHN all of Saturday, and saw hockey stick growth.
Install: npx wuphf@latest
Repo: https://github.com/nex-crm/wuphf
Website & Demo video: https://wuphf.team