This product was not featured by Product Hunt yet. It will not be visible on their landing page and won't be ranked (cannot win product of the day regardless of upvotes).
Most agent tools assume one folder, one login, and a window that stays open. Soromi is a workspace manager for AI coding agents: each project gets its own terminals, its own login (work, personal, others), and only the folders that matter, and you switch between them like Slack workspaces. Agents keep running when the window closes, and you can answer their prompts from your phone. Deliberately small: no boards, no personas, no dashboards. It runs the agents you already use (Claude Code, Codex).
Hey Product Hunt! 👋
I built Soromi because my daily reality with AI coding agents didn't match the tools I was using. My projects aren't one folder: there's an api repo, a web repo, a mobile repo. I have a work login, a personal login, and a friend login. And I kept closing my laptop only to find the agent had stopped mid-task.
So Soromi gives every project its own workspace, like Slack:
🖥️ Each workspace has its own terminal and agent, pointed at just the folders that matter
🔑 Each one uses its own login, so work, personal, and client accounts never mix
🔄 Agents keep running when the window closes; come back and everything is where you left it
📱 Check on an agent from your phone and answer its prompts with a tap
🔔 A notification when an agent needs you or finishes, even with the app closed
Just as important is what it will never be: no boards, no personas, no prompt libraries, no dashboards. It runs the agents you already use (Claude Code, Codex) and stays out of the way.
how does it handle the agents running in the background when the laptop is off, do they pause or do you need a server running somewhere?
One thing that would seal the deal for me is per-workspace environment variable and secrets management, so each project login can pull its own API keys without me exporting them manually each time. Right now swapping contexts still means I keep a notes file of which env belongs to which workspace, and that kind of defeats the cleanliness of the whole setup. Even a simple encrypted vault tied to each workspace would do the job, no need for a full dashboard around it.
Finally something that gets the multi-account mess right. Switching between work and personal Claude Code sessions without logging in and out feels like the obvious thing that nobody built until now.
About Soromi on Product Hunt
“A small, fast home for AI coding agents”
Soromi was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 7 upvotes and 5 comments, placing #129 on the daily leaderboard. Most agent tools assume one folder, one login, and a window that stays open. Soromi is a workspace manager for AI coding agents: each project gets its own terminals, its own login (work, personal, others), and only the folders that matter, and you switch between them like Slack workspaces. Agents keep running when the window closes, and you can answer their prompts from your phone. Deliberately small: no boards, no personas, no dashboards. It runs the agents you already use (Claude Code, Codex).
Soromi was featured in Open Source (68.6k followers), Developer Tools (515.4k followers), Artificial Intelligence (473.1k followers) and GitHub (41.3k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 218k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Soromi?
Soromi was hunted by Juan 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.
Want to see how Soromi stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.