What's possible
Real things people use SupaNet for, to spark ideas.
The features are nice, but the point is what you can do with them. Here are some patterns that come up again and again. None of these require you to write code - they are combinations of the things in this section.
Ask your documents anything
Upload your handbooks, contracts, specs, and policies. Then anyone on the team can ask questions in plain language and get answers grounded in the actual documents, with a citation pointing back to the source. No more "which version of the policy is current?" and no more hunting through a shared drive.
Turn a conversation into a shareable page
Work something out in the chat - a plan, a diagram, a summary - then have the assistant save it as an artifact and share the link. For HTML artifacts you get a clean standalone page. Edit the artifact later and the shared page updates itself.
Build a library of team shortcuts
Capture the prompts your team uses constantly as skills. Standups, status updates, drafting in your house style, formatting reports - once it is a skill, everyone gets the good version every time.
A morning briefing that writes itself
Set up a scheduled job that gathers what you care about and emails you a summary every morning. You wake up to the briefing instead of building it.
React to incoming events
Point a form, a CRM, or another tool at a SupaNet webhook so that when something happens out there, SupaNet processes it in here - summarising, filing, flagging, or routing it - without anyone watching.
Give an outside AI a way in
SupaNet can act as a bridge so that an external AI tool (like Claude on your own machine) can push documents and pages into your workspace. That is more of a builder topic - see Building on SupaNet - but it is worth knowing the door exists.
The bigger idea
Each of these is small on its own. The value compounds when you stack them: your knowledge lives in SupaNet, your shortcuts are saved, your routine work runs on a schedule, and the assistant ties it all together. Start with one, and add the next when you feel the friction it removes.