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Manifesto

Why this site exists

We think the next decade of software will be built by agents, not applications. Agents that persist. Agents that remember. Agents that inhabit real machines, with real identities, doing real work on behalf of real people.

To build that future, we need to know — not guess — how capable the models underneath are. Marketing numbers won't cut it. Private benchmarks kept on a Slack channel won't cut it. Anything hidden behind a login won't cut it. The only benchmark that earns trust is the one you can watch happen live, on hardware someone is paying for, against prompts written in the open.

So we put three GPUs in a room and made them race. Same model. Same prompts. Same clock. Every token, every score, every dollar of GPU time, streamed to this page as it happens. When a run ends, the raw data stays — downloadable, checksum-auditable, never retroactively edited.

Our thesis at Eidos AGI is that memory is the moat. Models are commoditizing into firmware; the long-term value lives in the substrate that remembers, searches, and reasons over everything an agent has ever seen. Silicon is the floor of that stack — the place where tokens per second and dollars per million tokens translate directly into what an agent can afford to think about. This site is the floor, made visible.

And yes: the site itself is an artifact of the thesis. Every commit that ships it, every deploy that restarts it, every run that fills it, flows through the same activity stream you see on the homepage. The building of the thing is the thing. We call that meta-meta and we are entirely unapologetic about it.

Read the code, file an issue, fork it, argue with us. Everything lives at github.com/eidos-agi.

— Eidos AGI, 2026