Launch Sequence Initiated

From Download to Superintelligence in 120 Seconds

No jargon. No YAML. No 40-step tutorials. Pick your platform below and follow the cards — we'll hold your hand the whole way. (Metaphorically. ATLAS will do that later, literally, via hotkey.)

⏱ 2 min setup
🪄 3 platforms
🧘 0 headaches

Drag, Drop, Done

Mac install is the good kind of boring. One .dmg, one drag, a polite goodbye to the disk image. You'll be at the welcome screen in ninety seconds flat.

1

Grab the .dmg

Head over to /downloads.html and hit the Mac download button. The file weighs in at roughly 450MB and runs on both Apple Silicon and Intel — one universal binary, no forking.

Why so chunky? ATLAS ships with a local AI model baked in, so your semantic memory works even when your Wi-Fi is having a moment.
2

Open the .dmg 💿

Double-click the downloaded file in your Downloads folder (or hit it from the dock bounce). A classic Mac install window slides open — the kind with the big app icon on the left and an Applications shortcut on the right.

3

Drag ATLAS into Applications

Click the ATLAS icon, drag it across the window, and drop it onto the Applications folder shortcut. You'll hear the satisfying Finder copy whoosh.

ATLAS .dmg installer window showing the ATLAS icon being dragged onto the Applications folder shortcut
The classic Mac install ritual — drag ATLAS into Applications.
4

Eject the .dmg

Find the ATLAS drive in your Finder sidebar, right-click it, and pick Eject. Don't leave it mounted — it's rude, and it clutters your sidebar.

Finder sidebar showing a right-click menu with the Eject option highlighted on the mounted ATLAS disk image
Right-click the ATLAS volume in the sidebar, then Eject.

macOS Will Try To Stop You. Here's How to Politely Decline.

The private-alpha build isn't code-signed yet, so Apple's Gatekeeper is going to throw a small tantrum. Two clicks and you're past it.

5

Try to open ATLAS the normal way ⚠️

Launch ATLAS from Launchpad or double-click it in Applications. macOS will pop a stern dialog that says something like "ATLAS can't be opened because it is from an unidentified developer" or "macOS cannot verify the developer of ATLAS".

Click Cancel (or OK) on that dialog. Do not move it to Trash. We're about to outsmart it.

macOS Gatekeeper dialog warning that ATLAS is from an unidentified developer, with Cancel and Move to Trash buttons
The Gatekeeper speed bump. Hit Cancel — don't trash it.
This warning is expected during the private alpha. The production release will be fully code-signed and notarized by Apple, so this whole section becomes a historical curiosity.
6

Right-click → Open (the magic handshake) 🤝

Head back to your Applications folder. Right-click (or Control+click) the ATLAS icon and choose Open from the menu.

A new dialog appears — same warning, but this one has an Open button. Click it. You're in.

Right-click context menu on the ATLAS app in Applications with Open highlighted, alongside the resulting dialog that has an Open button
Right-click ATLAS in Applications, pick Open, then click Open on the new dialog.
You only need to do this once. After the first launch, macOS remembers your choice and ATLAS opens like any other app.
7

Plan B: Privacy & Security → Open Anyway

If the right-click trick doesn't cough up an Open button (it happens on some macOS versions), go the long way:

Open System SettingsPrivacy & Security. Scroll all the way down until you see a line that reads "ATLAS was blocked from use because it is not from an identified developer." Next to it sits an Open Anyway button. Click it, then confirm with your Mac password or Touch ID.

macOS System Settings Privacy and Security pane showing the ATLAS was blocked message with an Open Anyway button
Privacy & Security → scroll to the bottom → Open Anyway.

Your Account, Your Brain

Sign in to unlock your credit balance and wake up your encrypted memory. No passwords, no OTP codes — just one tap.

8

Hit "Get Started" 🚪

ATLAS greets you with a welcome screen. The subtitle reads: "A calm, proactive personal AI. Setup takes under two minutes." (It really does.) Click the big Get Started button.

ATLAS welcome screen with the tagline A calm proactive personal AI and a Get Started button
The ATLAS welcome screen. One button. No funny business.
9

Click "Sign in with OTPless"

A secure sign-in window pops up. The status line at the bottom will say "Opening secure sign-in…" — that's normal. Follow the prompts in the window (phone, email, or one-tap, depending on what you pick).

ATLAS sign-in screen with the Sign in with OTPless button and status text reading Opening secure sign-in
One-tap, passwordless sign-in via OTPless.
OTPless means no six-digit codes clogging up your SMS inbox. It's a passwordless auth provider that lets you sign in with a single tap on your phone or email link.
10

Wait for "Signed in ✓"

When the check mark appears, the wizard advances automatically. Behind the scenes, your credit balance loads and your encrypted memory wakes up from its nap.

Hotkey, Voice, Vibes

Thirty seconds of customization so ATLAS feels like yours, not a default install.

11

Pick a global hotkey ⌨️

The default is +Space (Alt+Space). Tap it from anywhere and the ATLAS overlay materializes.

Want something else? Click Record new and press your combo. ATLAS will gently warn you if your choice collides with another app's shortcut — it won't let you accidentally break Spotlight.

ATLAS hotkey recorder showing Alt plus Space as the current binding with a Record new button
Default hotkey is ⌥+Space. Click Record new to change it.
12

Pick a theme 🌓

Three options: System, Light, or Dark. System quietly follows your Mac's appearance setting, so ATLAS flips with the rest of your OS at sunset.

13

Pick a voice 🗣️

The default backend is gemini-live with the voice Aoede. Other backends and voices show up in the dropdown depending on your configuration — pick whichever one you want talking to you all day.

14

(Optional) Turn on a wake word 👂

Off by default. Flip the toggle and ATLAS will listen for a phrase — the default is "Hey Atlas", but you can change it to literally anything. "Yo compiler". "Wake up, kid." ATLAS doesn't judge.

Wake word needs microphone access. We'll ask for that in the next section, so don't worry about it yet.

macOS Wants a Word

Mac asks for four permissions. Each one unlocks a specific power. Every one of them is skippable — skipped tiles go amber on the Ready Hub and you can flip them on later.

15

Accessibility ♿

Why ATLAS asks: "Global hotkey + overlay above other apps."

Without Accessibility access, your global hotkey won't summon the overlay. macOS treats hotkeys-from-anywhere as a privileged action, so this one is kind of a must-have.

ATLAS permissions screen showing four tiles for Accessibility Screen Recording Microphone and Location each with a Grant button
Four permission tiles. Grant them one at a time, or skip and come back.
16

Screen Recording 🖥️

Why ATLAS asks: "Screenshots and screen-aware help."

This lets ATLAS actually see what's on your screen when you ask something like "what does this error mean?" or "summarize this PDF I'm looking at". Skip it and screen-aware answers politely turn into guesses.

17

Microphone 🎙️

Why ATLAS asks: "Voice messages and live voice."

Required for Talk mode and the wake word. If you skipped the wake word in the last step and you don't plan on talking to ATLAS out loud, you can skip this too — nothing breaks.

18

Location 📍

Why ATLAS asks: "Location-aware reminders."

Optional. Lets ATLAS know whether you're at home or at work so it can context-switch reminders ("remind me to grab the package when I get home"). Happy to skip.

Granting only two of the four is totally fine. Skipped tiles just glow amber on the Ready Hub and features degrade politely — nothing crashes, nothing nags.

The One-Minute Install

ATLAS now assembles its engine. Seven phases download in the background. Don't quit mid-install — it's resumable, sure, but it's annoying for both of us.

19

Watch the progress bar fill up 📊

A progress bar ticks through each phase. A rotating "Did you know?" card plays trivia about ATLAS while you wait — educational and entertaining.

The seven phases are:

  • Node.js 20 — the runtime that keeps ATLAS alive and breathing.
  • Browser engine (Playwright Chromium) — so ATLAS can drive your browser when you ask it to book, buy, or scrape.
  • AI model (MiniLM embeddings) — the local semantic brain that makes your memory searchable, offline.
  • Audio toolkit (sox) — so voice works even without a network handshake.
  • Data directory — the cozy spot where your memory lives. All local. All encrypted.
  • Workspace folder — where ATLAS drops files it creates for you, so you always know where to find them.
  • Finalize — the final click of the seatbelt.
ATLAS install progress screen with a progress bar and a Did you know trivia card rotating facts about ATLAS
The install screen — progress bar plus rotating "Did you know?" trivia.
Total install time is usually 30 to 90 seconds. If you've installed ATLAS before, most phases reuse their cached artifacts and finish in under five seconds. Yes, really.
20

If a phase fails, hit Retry 🔁

Usually it's a network hiccup — cafe Wi-Fi, VPN flapping, that kind of thing. Click Retry failed phase and it picks up right where it left off. Everything is resumable. No redownloads.

You're In

Welcome to the Ready Hub — the home base for launching, talking, and typing to ATLAS.

21

Say hi to the Ready Hub 👋

You'll see "Ready to go" next to your Mac username in the greeting. Three buttons await:

  • Launch A.T.L.A.S (primary) — boots the main panel.
  • 🎙 Talk — jumps straight into live voice mode.
  • ⌨️ Type — pops the overlay open for text input.
ATLAS Ready Hub screen with Ready to go greeting and three buttons Launch ATLAS Talk and Type
The Ready Hub. Three buttons. Unlimited potential.
22

Click Launch 🎬

ATLAS is now humming quietly in your menu bar and dock. Press your hotkey (+Space by default) from anywhere — any app, any moment — to summon the overlay.

Scroll down to the "Using ATLAS" section below for ideas on what to ask it first. (Hint: start with something small. Then get greedy.)

Summon. Ask. Watch.

Your first 60 seconds with ATLAS. No tutorials, no tours, no 14-step onboarding. Just press a key and start talking.

  1. 1

    Press your hotkey.

    +Space on Mac, Ctrl+Space on Windows. A glassmorphic overlay slides in wherever you are — on top of your browser, your IDE, your Figma, your anything.

    ATLAS overlay summoned with the hotkey — a glassy command bar floating above the user's current workspace
    The overlay appears wherever you are. It doesn't care what app is in front.
  2. 2

    Type something. Anything.

    No magic syntax. No slash commands to memorize. Ask it like you'd ask a smart friend who happens to own your computer. A few to get you started:

    • What's on my calendar tomorrow?
    • Summarize the last three emails from my boss.
    • Build me a landing page for a coffee subscription — launch it on Vercel.
    • Find me three paying remote UX jobs and open the applications.
  3. 3

    Watch ATLAS work.

    It'll narrate as it goes — which tools it's calling, what it's clicking, what it's thinking. Stop it anytime. Edit the plan anytime. You're the director; ATLAS is the very capable, very fast crew.

    ATLAS picks its own models. Simple chat → Haiku. Tool-heavy work → Sonnet. Deep reasoning → Opus. You don't have to think about it.

Just Say It Out Loud

Voice mode: the lazy-genius button. When typing feels like a chore, hold down a conversation instead.

  1. 4

    Click 🎙 Talk on the Ready Hub.

    Or just say your wake word if you enabled it — "Hey Atlas" by default. The orb pulses, the mic opens, and you're live.

    ATLAS voice mode active — a glowing orb with a live waveform, listening to the user
    The orb breathes while it listens. No timers, no 30-second cutoff.
  2. 5

    Talk like a human.

    Sub-second latency. Interrupt mid-sentence. Change your mind. Trail off. ATLAS keeps up. It also shuts up when you start talking — no talking-over-you thing that other assistants do.

    Voice mode is amazing for cooking, driving, and working out — times you literally can't type. It's also oddly effective for brainstorming because you think out loud.

It's Not Trapped in a Window

ATLAS can live on Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, email, and Matrix — all from the same brain, same memory, same identity. Connect as many as you want from the Channels page in the desktop app.

Pick your platforms

Telegram
  • Bot token — format like 1234567890:ABCdef…
  • Allowed user IDs — comma-separated (e.g. 987654321,555666777)

Where to get it: open @BotFather on Telegram → /newbot → copy the token.

Discord
  • Bot token — 50+ char string

Create a bot in the Discord Developer Portal → Bot → Reset Token → copy.

Slack
  • Click "Install to workspace" — OAuth flow, no manual tokens.

Just tap the button. Slack will walk you through permissions.

WhatsApp
  • Click "Generate QR", then scan with WhatsApp mobile → Settings → Linked Devices.

Uses Baileys under the hood. Pair takes 3–10 seconds.

Email (IMAP/SMTP)
  • IMAP host & port — e.g. imap.gmail.com:993
  • SMTP host & port — e.g. smtp.gmail.com:587
  • Email + password — use an app-specific password for Gmail

Gmail/Outlook presets auto-fill the hosts. You only need an app password.

Matrix
  • Homeserver URL — e.g. https://matrix.org
  • Access token — generated by your homeserver

Log in to your Matrix client → Settings → Help & About → Advanced → copy access token.

The ATLAS Channels page showing six platform cards — Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, Email, Matrix — with connect buttons
The Channels page. Six cards, one brain.
Each channel goes through two clicks: TestSave. Test must pass within 60 seconds before Save unlocks. Keeps typos from breaking things.

Welcome to the AGI Experience

ATLAS isn't a chatbot. It's a continuously running process with memory, tools, and the ability to drive your computer. Here's a taste of what it actually does.

🧠

Persistent Memory

Remembers every conversation. Not in a creepy way — in a "oh you mentioned this last week, want to pick it back up?" way. All local, all encrypted, all on your machine.

Try: "What did we decide about the pricing page last Thursday?"

🌐

Deep Research

Up to 500 sources per run. Generates hypotheses, scores credibility, reranks relevance. It's a research intern that doesn't sleep, doesn't flake, and doesn't need coffee.

Try: "Research the current state of small-batch robotics startups and send me a 5-page brief."

🤖

Multi-Agent Swarms

Decomposes big tasks into sub-agents (researcher, coder, browser-user) that work in parallel. You give one prompt; a team does the work.

Try: "Build a Chrome extension that adds a dark mode toggle, then write its Product Hunt launch copy."

🖥

Computer Control

Drives your browser via the Chrome extension. Clicks, types, navigates, screenshots. No API required — if you can do it with a mouse, ATLAS can do it too.

Try: "Apply to five remote UX jobs matching my resume. Draft each cover letter in my voice."

🧑‍💻

Real Coding

Design-doc gating, LSP integration, per-repo codebase index, git worktrees, code critic (compile / test / lint / SAST). Not vibe-coding — actual engineering.

Try: "Refactor our auth middleware to use JWT rotation. Write tests. Open a PR."

🎬

Video Studio

Project-scoped pipeline: scene detection, beat sync, AI edit planning, FFmpeg render. Hash-addressed for reproducibility — same inputs always give the same cut.

Try: "Cut my 40-minute Zoom recording into a 90-second highlight reel set to this mp3."

📣

Marketing Brain

Native integrations with 9 platforms: Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, X, Facebook, YouTube, Reddit, Product Hunt. Content calendars. Cold outreach. Trend research.

Try: "Post my new blog across LinkedIn and X in native formats. Schedule the Instagram carousel for tomorrow 9am IST."

🌙

Proactive Mode

While you sleep, ATLAS consolidates memory, plans tomorrow, and keeps a morning brief waiting. Quiet hours 22:30–07:00 by default — it won't ping you at 3am.

Try: "Every morning, brief me on inbox, calendar, and any task I left half-done yesterday."

Full feature tour lives at /features. This is the short version.

The Short List of Things That Could Break

Software is software. Here's what occasionally goes sideways and the 30-second fix for each.

🔌

The hotkey doesn't do anything.

Likely: Accessibility permission got skipped (Mac) or another app stole your hotkey (Windows). Open Settings → Hotkey and pick a different combo, or on Mac head to System Settings → Privacy & Security → Accessibility and re-enable ATLAS.

🔴

Chrome extension is stuck on "Disconnected".

Make sure the desktop app is running. Click Reconnect in the popup. If it's still red: port 18792 may be taken by another app — check lsof -i :18792 (Mac) or netstat -ano | findstr 18792 (Windows) and kill the offender.

🛑

Install phase failed.

99% of the time it's a network hiccup. Click Retry failed phase — each phase resumes independently, so you won't lose progress. If it keeps failing on the same one, check your connection and free disk space (~3GB needed).

🔕

No notifications coming through.

Mac: System Settings → Notifications → ATLAS → Enable. Windows: click Allow when it prompts the first time, or go to Settings → Privacy & Security → Notifications and let ATLAS through.

🎙

Voice mode says "no mic".

Mac: System Settings → Privacy & Security → Microphone → toggle ATLAS on. Windows: Settings → Privacy & Security → Microphone → let ATLAS in. Then restart the app once to be safe.

🤔

I granted a permission by accident / skipped one I needed.

Open the Ready Hub. Skipped permissions show as amber tiles with an Un-skip button. Click it to re-prompt — no reinstall needed.

🆘

Something truly weird is happening.

Email hi@tryatlasagi.com or hit the contact page. We read every message — no auto-replies, no ticket numbers, no "your call is important to us". Just a human, usually within a day.

Can't find your issue here? The desktop app has a Diagnostics → Export logs button that packages everything ATLAS knows about itself. Attach it to your email and we'll figure it out together.

Still stuck somewhere?

We read every message. If something's weird, broken, or confusing — tell us. It's how ATLAS gets better (and how you get unblocked in minutes, not days).