Artifacts
Save and share documents, code, and live web pages with a link.
An artifact is something SupaNet saves for you so you can keep it, edit it, and share it. It might be a written document, a piece of code, or a small web page like a diagram or a one-pager.
Why artifacts are useful
Normally when an assistant writes something good, it is trapped in the chat. In SupaNet you can pull it out into an artifact. Once it is an artifact you can:
- Edit it in a dedicated editor.
- Preview it (for web pages, you see the rendered result).
- Share it by setting its visibility and copying a link.
- Come back to it later - it is saved, not lost in chat history.
Two ways an artifact appears
- The assistant makes one for you. When it produces something worth keeping, it saves it as an artifact and drops a share link right into the chat.
- You make one yourself. On the Artifacts page you can create one from scratch and edit it.
Sharing and visibility
Each artifact has a visibility setting:
- Private - only you can see it.
- Unlisted - anyone with the link can see it, but it is not listed publicly.
- Public - openly viewable.
When something is unlisted or public, the link works for people who are not even signed in to SupaNet.
Standalone web pages
If an artifact is an HTML page, SupaNet can serve it as a clean, full-screen page with none of the app's chrome around it - just your content at its own link. This is perfect for sharing "a great diagram in HTML" or a simple landing page without deploying a whole website.
Because the page is served straight from the artifact, editing the artifact updates the live page. Fix a typo in the editor and the public link reflects it immediately. Private artifacts are never exposed this way - only unlisted or public ones.
A nice side effect
Because artifacts live in the workspace, the assistant can also create and update them on your behalf as part of a larger task. Ask it to "write this up and share it" and you get back a link, not a wall of text to copy.