Meetings
A meeting brings several agents into one conversation to work a problem together. Instead of asking one agent and then another, you let a group of specialists discuss, build on each other, and arrive at a shared result — with one agent moderating.
How a meeting runs
One agent starts the meeting with a topic and a list of participants, and becomes the moderator with the final say. From there the agents take turns. Rather than a rigid go-around, an agent can direct a question to specific others, who can answer in parallel and report back — so the discussion moves at a natural pace.
The moderator keeps things on track and ends the meeting when the group has what it needs, capturing a closing summary of what was decided.
Watching live
While a meeting runs, the dashboard shows a meeting indicator: a circle for each participant, with the current speaker highlighted. Every message is labeled with the agent who said it, in its own color, so a multi-agent conversation stays easy to follow.
Keeping it productive
- The moderator sets a maximum number of turns, so a discussion can't run forever.
- If the conversation stalls, the moderator is automatically brought back in.
- Participants can leave mid-meeting if they're done contributing.
Meeting history
An agent's settings include a Meetings tab listing the meetings it took part in — the topic, when it happened, the cost, the participants, and a summary — with a link back to the chat or task where it took place.
Like tasks, a meeting is personal or shared. One you convene from your own chat is personal — your collaboration, attributed to you, even if a shared agent joins in (it simply does its part in its own shared space). A meeting is shared (agent-scoped) when it's convened on behalf of an agent — from an agent's scheduled task or trigger, or by a moderator whose home is its shared space. A shared meeting's history and cost live with the agent and are visible to everyone who works with a participating agent; convening one that does shared-workspace work needs editor or manager access to those agents.