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Symphony
A
Devin
A
Cursor
S
Lex
A
TaglineOpenAI's open-source daemon that turns your Linear board into an always-on coding agent factory — tickets go in, pull requests come out.Cognition Labs' autonomous coding engineer.VS Code fork that made AI coding actually work.Google Docs with an AI collaborator baked in.
CategoryAgentsAgentsCodingWriting
PricingFree (open-source)$500/moFree + $20/mo Pro + $40/mo BusinessFree + $12/mo
Best forEngineering teams already using Linear + OpenAI Codex who want to stop babysitting agent sessions and instead let the issue tracker drive autonomous coding at scale.Engineering teams offloading tickets. Ops/platform work.Developers. Non-developers who want to ship working code.Essays, long-form drafts, thinking on the page.
Strengths
  • Fully autonomous ticket-to-PR pipeline: every open Linear issue gets its own isolated Codex agent without manual supervision
  • Fault-tolerant Elixir/OTP architecture automatically restarts crashed agents and manages hundreds of concurrent runs
  • WORKFLOW.md keeps all orchestration policy version-controlled inside the repo, so agent behavior is reproducible and reviewable like code
  • Proven internal results: OpenAI reported a 500% increase in landed PRs on some teams within three weeks
  • Open spec encourages community re-implementations in any language, not just Elixir
  • Works like an engineer — takes Slack tasks, opens PRs
  • Handles multi-hour engineering work
  • Reports back with what it did
  • Tab completion feels like mind-reading
  • Composer for multi-file edits
  • Runs Claude, GPT, Gemini — you pick
  • Clean writing UX — distraction-free
  • +++ prompt triggers AI help
  • Collaboration + AI feedback together
Weaknesses
  • Currently only supports Linear as an issue tracker — GitHub Issues and Jira integrations are not yet official
  • Only OpenAI Codex is officially supported as the agent runtime; other model integrations are community-contributed and incomplete
  • Self-hosted, Elixir-dependent engineering preview with no built-in sandboxing — not suitable for untrusted or production environments out of the box
  • Expensive
  • Best for well-scoped tasks
  • Not for solo hobbyists
  • Can feel overwhelming for non-coders
  • Expensive at scale
  • Less feature-rich than Google Docs
  • AI ceiling below dedicated tools
Kai's verdictSymphony is the most architecturally serious 'issue tracker as control plane' approach yet — 15K GitHub stars in weeks confirms the idea resonates — but it's still a rough, self-hosted engineering preview that demands Elixir chops and a Linear-only workflow. (Verdict pending Phi's full review.)A-tier for the right use case. Not for solo devs. If you manage engineers, try one license.S-tier for coding. If you write code of any kind, this pays back the $20 in a day.A-tier. Beautiful UX. The writing app I'd pick if I only wrote long-form.
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