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Launch HN: Omnara (YC S25) – Run Claude Code and Codex from anywhere

45•kmansm27•2h ago
Hey y’all, Kartik, Ishaan, and Christian from Omnara (https://www.omnara.com/) here. We’re building a web and mobile agentic IDE for Claude Code and Codex that lets you run and interact with coding agents from anywhere. Omnara lets you run Claude Code and Codex sessions on your own machine, and exposes those sessions through a web and mobile interface so you can stay involved even when you’re away from your desk. Think of it like Claude Code Desktop or Conductor, except you can continue your sessions on your phone.

Here’s a demo of the web and mobile apps - https://youtu.be/R8Wmy4FLbhQ

We started using Claude Code early last year and quickly ran into a pattern: agents could work for long stretches on their own, but progress would stall whenever they needed follow-up input. If that happened while we were away from our desks, everything just paused. We looked at remote agent solutions like Codex Web and Devin, which were the main options at the time, but they ran in remote VMs, and we wanted our coding agent to run in our own environment. Our first attempt at solving this was a lightweight wrapper that streamed messages from the Claude Code CLI to a mobile app, but that approach ended up being fragile and hard to maintain.

As the Claude Agent SDK matured, it gave us enough control to rewrite Omnara from scratch and run the agent loop directly. We chose to build a GUI across web and mobile instead of a TUI or CLI, because we think GUIs are generally more ergonomic for working with agents and code, especially on mobile. We still preserve the main strength of CLIs and TUIs: running anywhere, including on headless machines.

Omnara keeps that property by running a small headless daemon on the user’s machine (or a remote VM) that hosts the agent loop. The daemon maintains an authenticated, outbound WebSocket connection to our server, which relays messages between the agent running on the user’s machine and any connected web or mobile clients. Because the daemon only makes outbound connections, there’s no need for exposed ports, SSH access, or tunneling on the user’s machine.

In our first version of Omnara, users liked that agent sessions ran in their own environment, but they still depended on the machine staying online. Some users ran Omnara on a remote machine that stayed up, which worked well for them, though most still did most of their work on laptops. In the current version, Omnara can continue an agent session in a hosted remote sandbox when your local machine goes offline.

The conversation state of an agent is already persisted on our server, and you can optionally enable cloud syncing for the working code. When syncing is enabled, Omnara creates git commits at each turn in the conversation and pushes them to our server, so execution can resume from the same state regardless of whether it continues locally or in the cloud. If you continue working in a remote sandbox, you can later pull any changes back into your local environment when you return to your machine. Environment parity in the sandbox isn’t perfect yet, but in practice, missing dependencies are usually easy to resolve by asking the agent to install them.

Another thing we learned from using the initial version of Omnara is that mobile is fine for quick interactions, but not great for extended back-and-forth. Users asked for a hands-free way to keep agents moving while walking, driving, or doing something else, which led us to add a voice agent. Coming from more traditional software engineering backgrounds, we honestly thought coding by talking to a voice agent would be gimmicky and added it mostly as a fallback.

What surprised us is how useful the voice agent ended up being in practice. When working with coding agents, being redundant and overly explicit usually helps, and people naturally give more detail when speaking than when typing. Going back and forth with the agent as the conversation unfolds tends to produce a much more solid plan than trying to one-shot it with a prompt (this could technically also be done over text, but talking and iterating over voice feels easier and more natural). It’s also just fun. Talking through an idea with an agent while out on a walk is a lot more enjoyable than staring at a terminal screen.

To try it out, open your terminal and download Omnara with

  curl -fsSL https://omnara.com/install/install.sh | bash
then run omnara inside any git repository. This starts a headless Claude Code or Codex session in that repo, which immediately appears in the Omnara web and mobile apps. From there, you can continue that session or start new ones remotely (with or without worktrees) and switch between the web and mobile clients without interrupting the agent.

Omnara is free for 10 agent sessions per month, then $20/month for unlimited sessions. When agents run in your own environment, you can use your existing Claude or Codex subscription, so there’s no need to pay us for additional tokens. If you use Claude Code or Codex, we’d love to hear your feedback on Omnara!

Comments

zomglings•1h ago
I have been hungry to do more work from my cell phone. It's ridiculous to be forced to sit in front of a computer to work with AI.

My current solution is to have claude (--dangerously-skip-permissions) listen for messages in my slack DMs to myself and take action in response to those messages.

I would happily switch to something better.

Why is Omnara better?

kmansm27•1h ago
There's a lot of solutions that people are hacking together to be able to use coding agents from their phone (e.g. terminal emulator + tailscale, slack, whatsapp, telegram). I enjoy Omnara more than those solutions because it's a native experience tailored for coding agents, e.g. you can select models/harnesses, spin up new sessions, create worktrees, view code changes, see tool calls, have live previews, have voice agent support, and on and on. Omnara is a solution meant to interact with coding agents from your phone, so we're able to add a lot of nice UX features to our app that those other solutions can't.
devinbernosky•1h ago
OpenCode is free and has an excellent front end for this kind of work
cmsparks•1h ago
OpenCode is great and `opencode serve` in particular is very cool. Though I think the main thing is that you need to manage the OpenCode server yourself and expose it via tailscale or something like that. Our goal is to provide managed infrastructure around the coding agent harness with features like mobile, sandboxes, preview urls, etc.

Our goal is to be harness agnostic as well, so eventually we will be adding support for running OpenCode sessions in Omnara.

eclipxe•1h ago
OpenChamber is a good option you use opencode
cmsparks•1h ago
FWIW, we'll definitely add OpenCode support soon!
gdilla•1h ago
sounds really close to fart, in japanese.
kmansm27•1h ago
Omnara is used while on the toilet a lot
ncphillips•1h ago
I don't quite see the appeal, because Claude Code already supports something similar. They spin up container to make the changes in and then open a PR. I can just use the Claude iOS app to do this. My computer doesn't need to be running or exposed to the internet.
kmansm27•1h ago
Omnara’s is useful if you have a complex dev setup that’s hard to replicate in Claude’s remote container, or you want to test things out locally without any friction. Omnara tries to make switching between being on your computer and being on your phone feel seamless, whereas in Claude, local and remote dev feel more disconnected.
p-a_58213•1h ago
I think someone should also mention Happy (https://happy.engineering), which has decent mobile clients and is currently MIT-licensed.

Although I must say that Omnara's UI looks absolutely fantastic. Well done!

faramarz•1h ago
I use this everyday, and even have the Happy server on my home Mac to skip the cloud relay.

I think I will only explore an alternative if the UI on the mobile is dramatically better (something to explore) but im trying my best to only pay for the model these day and avoid any other tooling subscription, and doing pretty great thus far.

isehgal•46m ago
Totally get it, we're trying to minimize subscriptions too. Free tier gives you 10 sessions/month with no length limits, so you can actually get a decent amount done before deciding if it's worth paying
isehgal•48m ago
Thanks for the shout! Happy looks solid - always great to see more options here. Anecdotally from users who've tried both, we've heard Omnara has better reliability and latency. We also layer on some features like web support, worktrees, sandboxing, richer git management (diffs, checkpoints), and preview URLs. Would love to hear what you think if you give it a spin :)
koakuma-chan•1h ago
So you're just a Claude Code wrapper? Question to YC: how did this get funded?
tverbeure•1h ago
I used to think that getting admitted to YC was a major accomplishment. Maybe it was at some point, but at the college graduation parties of my daughter it seemed like pretty much everyone who tried had gotten in. Most collapsed after a few months due to infighting, funds mismanagement etc. It was fascinating to watch.
deron12•1h ago
I think you mean "prestigious" rather than "major accomplishment". You're right, there was a small period of time when it was. However, that window didn't quite align with "best time to do YC" (several years prior to such prestige) nor with "best time to be doing YC" (the prestige embellishes your resume, which is useless if you're otherwise occupied).

It's interesting to me that YC has managed to dilute this prestige to a large extent. I don't think it's an inevitable result of scale: look at Google. I think "Xoogler" prestige has diminished, but it's not nearly as bad as what has happened to the YC label.

My theory is: YC never figured out their formula. The whole formula is essentially Paul Graham, who had a knack for trusting his gut (and sometimes his wife) when everything else in his "system" was saying NO.

Once they lost that, they had to rely on what was left, and it simply wasn't competitive anymore. It's like Apple in their John Sculley era. While Sculley is credited with growing Apple's revenue from $800 million to $8 billion, his approach created a "mess of dull SKUs" that eventually confused customers and diluted the brand.

They also have a (bad) habit of removing access to bookface for all the founders who aren't "active", decimating their network and in some ways discarding valuable knowledge around what didn't work.

geoffschmidt•4m ago
I think Jessica Livingston deserves at least as much credit as Paul for YC's success in that early era, and IIRC he has the same view.
kmansm27•1h ago
We're a very complex Claude Code wrapper :) Try it out and lmk what you think!
koakuma-chan•49m ago
I like your landing page and the video where the guy does stuff outside while his agents work in background, but the nature of your company does not appear to me as being consistent with screenshots of messages from Paul Graham discussing what startups ought to be like, etc, that YCombinator's LinkedIn account keeps posting. I'm not saying that this is you, but I have an impression that a lot of these companies getting into YC do it as a money grab and/or for bragging rights while being as technically sophisticated as an above-average high school project. It's great that you got funded, but I'm not sure if you should have been.
kmansm27•38m ago
I'd say to try it out first, and then let me know what you think! And a product doesn't have to be technically sophisticated to be funded by YC (although I would say that Omnara is a pretty technical product, which you'll see if you try it out)!
keepamovin•1h ago
There's certainly something to the "mass delegation" trend. My best rn is on email: https://ai-chat.email
cmsparks•51m ago
Yeah we've definitely taken some inspiration from everyone who building an agent orchestrator/delegation app right now!
notabot33•1h ago
Another option that does all this and more for open code: https://github.com/btriapitsyn/openchamber

Not affiliated with that project, but have been using it for a few weeks and it blows every other 'GUI for the CLI agents' I've tried out of the water in terms of both features and just working snappily/consistently.

Also totally free, and actively being improved by the solo maintainer and an active community of contributors.

Omnara providing a tunnel for you is nice, but considering Tailscale is dead simple and free, feels hard to justify $20 a month for what looks like considerably less features than openchamber

kmansm27•1h ago
Yeah, this looks great for OpenCode (which we're planning on adding soon!), but I personally have Claude Code and Codex subscriptions, which Omnara supports. We also support syncing your local session to a cloud sandbox to continue your session, and in the cloud sandbox, we provide LLM tokens. As well as our voice agent costs are covered by us.
sanufar•1h ago
Woah, I had this exact idea, down to the tunneling and local machine! I basically just coded up a Tailscale + caffeinate harness for my agents and it's been working super well. Your UI looks great though, glad to see more players in this space!
sanufar•1h ago
Also your promo video is really fun! https://www.omnara.com/assets/landing/video/movie.mp4
kmansm27•1h ago
Haha thanks! It was fun to shoot :)
jdmoreira•1h ago
If you can see the messages unfortunately thats a deal breaker for me. If its encrypted end-to-end than I’m in.
isehgal•1h ago
Fair concern. We don't have true E2EE yet because our service needs access to message content for cross-device sync, notifications, and agent execution. Everything is encrypted in transit and at rest, and all repo operations happen locally on your machine.

We've heard this from other users and it's on our roadmap. The challenge is we're building features like voice coding agents and hosted sandboxes that require plaintext inputs, so we'd need two execution models. Doable, but adds complexity for our team size.

That said, it's something we're prioritizing as we grow. No promises on timing, but it's coming.

If you want to discuss specific requirements or a local-only mode, happy to chat: https://discord.gg/Dc46sYk6e3

kovek•22m ago
https://happy.engineering/ says that they have E2E encryption. Is that true?
KinoDecider123•1h ago
This is kino.
KinoDecider123•1h ago
This is Kino.
lalo2302•1h ago
Feels expensive for something that an engineer can hack in a couple of ours with tailscale and Claude Code. Has potential though. At $9 I'd be totally in, but moving from CC's Max plan at $100, adding $20 makes me wanna just hack an alternative. Maybe I'm just cheap.
redrove•1h ago
Agreed. In a post-CC world anyone can build this for themselves so easily. Especially since their entire supposed customer base already uses these tools to begin with.
kmansm27•1h ago
Yeah that makes sense. I personally feel like the tailscale + terminal emulator solution is pretty limited compared to Omnara's interface, and there's also 0 hassle of maintaining anything on your own with Omnara. You can try out Omnara for free, and see if you like it before paying! 10 sessions can get you pretty far, and there's no limit on the session length.
RobMurray•1h ago
How does this compare to Happy Coder? https://github.com/slopus/happy
cmsparks•1h ago
Anecdotally from some Omnara users who have used both, I've heard that reliability and latency when sending messaages is better in Omnara

We try to provide a decent chunk of features on top as well, including (but not limited to):

* web support

* worktrees

* sandboxing

* richer git management (richer diffs, checkpoints, git operations)

* preview URLs

kgc•1h ago
I think the native Claude and Codex apps already do this for free. They even have the voice input.
kmansm27•1h ago
They currently don't have the ability to use a local session from your phone, and they only have voice input, not voice input and output for completely hands free usage.
CharlesW•57m ago
> They currently don't have the ability to use a local session from your phone…

Claude Code will help you set this up using tmux. Voice input and output personally seems like a gimmick, but OS accessibilty features should work fine for this.

kmansm27•27m ago
Voice input + output sounds gimmicky (as I admit in the post), but it's quite useful for mobile coding. It's not as trivial as just printing out whatever Claude Code outputs.

"Claude Code will help you set this up using tmux" - I don't think that you can connect to tmux sessions running in Claude Code/Codex remote VMs using their mobile apps. Their mobile apps don't provide a terminal emulator afaik

sidsud•1h ago
I don't really understand the market for handoff of your vibe-coding session. Considering there's a need, does this use-case warrant a full blown SaaS solution?

Sidenote - is this novel enough to be backed by YC? Just seems like a feature that Anthropic/OpenAI could release any day.

kmansm27•46m ago
The idea is that if agents are coding for you, there's no need to be at your desk to manage them. I think the case for managing coding agents without being at your desk is becoming stronger as agents become more autonomous.

And for your sidenote, we'll see when Anthropic/OpenAI release something similar. For now it's pretty useful, and we're making it better every day.

sidsud•9m ago
congrats on the launch man! didn't mean to come off negatively. as for the sidenote - it might be worth considering now to push the product forward.
jpallen•58m ago
There's a lot of negative feedback in this thread, so let me say I'm really excited to try this! I have caring responsibilities at home that means I'm constantly switching between my laptop and phone. Claude code web has been a very useful tool for this, but it's not a great bit of software. Omnara looks much more configurable and thought out. I've looked for various solutions to this problem that just work, and nothing else mentioned in this thread fits the bill. Your demo looks like it nails it - I'm excited to try!
kmansm27•34m ago
Thank you! Yeah, a big selling point of Omnara is that it "just works." Let me know how it goes!
jpallen•21m ago
First impressions are good! Couple of small bits of feedback:

- I only had the option to create a worktree from main. I'd like to be able to pick any starting branch. Not a big deal, I just told claude to checkout the branch I wanted as my first instruction.

- For some reason in the Android app the usual automatic capitalisation of the first letter in a sentence doesn't work. Claude probably doesn't care, but I like to type in proper sentences!

- It would be nice if the worktree names got semantic names, e.g. by running my first prompt through Haiku. Maybe that's not the order things are set up in though

cmsparks•17m ago
> branching not from main

This is actually a PR that I have open right now, it'll be out soon!

> automatic capitalization

We'll get this fixed

> automatic worktree names

definitely on our roadmap, probably will do that this week

Nextbysam•51m ago
just use spoq.dev

https://x.com/OafTobarkk/status/2021634083449975125

Nextbysam•50m ago
great product.

try spoq.dev , it's free

inercia•40m ago
Open Source alternative: https://github.com/inercia/mitto
TheOnlyWayUp•39m ago
I see the need and I'll probably give it a go, but how does Omnara handle users' data? Do you store my tokens, stuff about my project, etc.?

If I paste in something confidential, and Omnara suffers a breach tomorrow - will my conversation data be a part of it?

isehgal•15m ago
Good question. We don't have E2EE yet (it's on the roadmap), so some level of trust in Omnara is required today. All repo operations happen locally on your machine. For messages/chat history: we store those encrypted at rest because we need access to sync across devices, send notifications, and resume agents. Cloud sandboxing is opt-in and would require syncing codebase state.
hmokiguess•38m ago
How does it compare to https://hapi.run/ ?

I have been pretty satisfied with it, and it’s free with unlimited sessions, so I need a good reason to switch

theturtletalks•27m ago
How is this different from VibeTunnel which is not limited to just Claude and Codex, but brings your terminals with you on your phone using tailscale?

There's also Happy, Coder/Mux, and so many others that actually started out open-source and stayed that way and I can be sure my chats are not going to a 3rd party?

kmansm27•11m ago
We think that terminal interfaces, especially on mobile, are not going to be the way people end up interacting with agents in the long run, which is a big reason we built Omnara.

And Omnara chats are stored in our DB, which is how we're able to enable our voice agent, cloud syncing, and ability to see all your chats while your machine is offline. Basically anything you see in the web and mobile clients is being proxied/persisted through our server, until you delete the chat.

dakolli•24m ago
Its hilarious how there's 50 clones of the same thing in the comment section, yall need to go watch Peter Thiels talk at YC from 2011 or whenever. Be contrarian, stop building the obvious thing.
cmsparks•13m ago
When we started out, people were asking "Why would you want to continue coding on your phone". There's obviously a ton of competition now, but I think it's also validation for us.

Even though this might be "the obvious thing", I think there is a non-obvious way to build it.

CuriouslyC•21m ago
This project seems like a good idea that didn't have enough of a moat. I'd suggest trying to narrow your target customer from "engineers that want to manage agents on their phone" to "people trying to do some particular kind of task," so you can bake in more value add and automation. You're not going to beat the labs on general tools, but they're not going to be willing to narrow their target customer, so you'll always be able to win at the margins.
__sy__•9m ago
i don't get all the hate in this thread. I literally was about to build this today, using my home server, tailscale, and some kind of web frontend. thanks for saving me time :)
saadn92•5m ago
Built something like this that’s open source and free: https://github.com/saadnvd1/agent-os

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