Summary

Omar launched on Hacker News as a terminal UI for managing very large fleets of coding agents from one interface. The project frames orchestration scale itself as the product, not just single-agent execution quality.

What changed

Omar launched publicly with a TUI focused on coordinating many coding agents in parallel.

Why it matters

Even if 100-agent workflows remain niche, the product reflects a broader shift toward supervisory tooling for agent fleets. That market is moving from single-agent chat shells toward queueing, oversight, and multi-worker control surfaces.

Evidence excerpt

The May 2 Hacker News digest described Omar as a TUI for managing 100 coding agents.

Sources