Orchestrate many computers with natural voice,
not a maze of remote desktops.
VEGA listens once, understands what you mean, and safely executes across your
VEGA-enabled machines — so one operator can work at “fleet scale” without
driving every screen by hand.
Windows beta · Start small, expand as needed · License-bound to your account
VEGA runs on one primary computer where you speak commands, and on your other
computers where the actions happen.
How VEGA works (in plain English).
VEGA is not a screen-sharing tool. You don’t “drive” other computers remotely.
Instead, you speak a request once — and VEGA makes the right computers do the work,
then brings the results back to you.
Open apps & windowsNavigate websitesType and fill formsTake screenshotsMove / send filesMulti-system workflows
Your command console (where you talk).
This is the computer you use directly. You say “VEGA” and describe what you want done.
VEGA turns your words into an actionable plan — like a checklist — without you touching
a keyboard for every step.
You speak once, VEGA understands the request.
VEGA decides which of your machines should handle each part.
You stay in control: nothing runs on a machine you didn’t approve.
Think of this as your “voice command center” for many systems.
Your connected machines (where the work happens).
These are the computers you’ve linked to VEGA. When a command targets them,
they perform the action locally — opening apps, navigating, typing, exporting files —
and then report back.
Runs actions locally on each machine (no constant screen streaming).
Targets the right app/window to reduce mis-clicks.
Sends back outputs like screenshots, files, or completion status.
Coming next: deeper “report understanding” and AI summaries across files and dashboards.
Who VEGA is for.
In beta, we’re working with teams who already operate multiple Windows machines and want to
reduce operator friction — not just screen-hop faster.
Operations & incident response rooms
One person can verbally orchestrate several displays: maps, dashboards,
ticket queues, logs, and more.
“Show network health on screen 2, incidents on 3, logs on 4.”
“Snapshot this view and share with the on-call lead.”