# StrixApp - OneStrix > StrixApp is a quiet command center for your coding agents - running Claude, Codex, OpenCode, shells, and SSH across local and remote machines - your agents keep running after you close the app, and you can drive the whole workspace from the command line or let an agent drive it for you. OneStrix ships two pieces: the **StrixApp** desktop client - where you organize work into projects, wings, and feathers - and a headless remote node you pair on other machines over an end-to-end-encrypted overlay, so the app can run terminals there as if they were local. You sign in once per device with an email code, and your subscription's device and per-device limits are enforced without ever blocking you while offline. Your project names, paths, and terminal output never leave your own machines. ## Pages - [Home](https://onestrix.com/): What StrixApp is - projects, wings, and feathers across local and remote machines. - [Download](https://onestrix.com/download): Download StrixApp for macOS, Windows, and Linux, plus the remote node. Free while in beta. - [Pricing](https://onestrix.com/pricing): Plans and per-device limits - Free starts at 3 devices. ## Legal - [Privacy](https://onestrix.com/privacy): Privacy policy - your project names, paths, and terminal output stay on your devices. - [Terms](https://onestrix.com/terms): Terms of use. - [Imprint](https://onestrix.com/imprint): Imprint / legal notice (Belichberg GmbH). ## Using Strix StrixApp is built to be driven by people and by agents alike. Beyond the desktop UI, each install ships a command-line tool so a script or an AI agent can run the same workflow without the GUI: - Sign in on a device with a one-time email code. - Add a remote machine from the app, then redeem the one-time pairing code on that machine to connect it. - Open, list, and close terminal sessions on the local machine or on any connected remote machine, and forward ports between them. The app also exposes a local automation interface so an AI agent can open a terminal, watch its output, type into it, and close it - the same actions you'd take by hand. Connection details for that interface are shown inside the app.