Threads that drift away from the code
Your team debates an architectural decision. Three days later the thread is buried. Six months later nobody can connect it to the code it shaped.
Skellix anchors your team’s decisions, discussions, and deliberations directly to the lines they describe. Not in Slack. Not in Jira. Permanently anchored, surviving refactors, visible to every developer who opens that file.
Your team debates an architectural decision. Three days later the thread is buried. Six months later nobody can connect it to the code it shaped.
Your sharpest deliberation happens during review. Then the review closes, the comments collapse, and the next person touching that code has no idea any conversation happened.
Your most experienced engineers carry years of context about why the codebase looks the way it does. When they go on vacation, switch teams, or leave entirely — that context goes with them.
Skellix is a codebase deliberation layer — a persistent home for the reasoning behind your code, anchored directly to the lines it describes.
Threads stay anchored to code across merges, refactors, and file moves. A comment left today is still attached to the right code in two years.
Any developer opening a file sees the deliberation that shaped it — inline in their IDE, or browseable in the web dashboard. No searching, no archaeology.
AI can explain what code does. It can't tell you why your team made the tradeoffs they did, what alternatives were rejected, or what constraints shaped the decision. Skellix captures that.
You're the one people ask when nobody knows why something works the way it does. Skellix lets you leave that answer on the code itself — write it once, every future developer finds it.
Onboarding takes too long because tribal knowledge lives in heads, not systems. Skellix turns your team's deliberation into an asset that compounds over time.
You're three weeks in and don't know why the auth layer was built the way it was. Skellix lets you read the deliberation that shaped each file — inline in your IDE, the moment you open it.
We’re in early development. Join the waitlist and we’ll reach out when we’re ready for beta testers.
No spam. Just a heads up when Skellix is ready.