axe
Capabilities

The cockpit

The three-rail terminal cockpit — research, markets, rewards — built for multi-hour operator sessions.

Axe's primary surface is a terminal application — a TUI cockpit, not a web dashboard. The choice is not aesthetic. A multi-hour market session with live tape, persistent thesis, and working memory is a workload terminals were built for and browsers actively fight against.

Three rails

The cockpit is organized as three vertical rails, each holding a different timescale of work:

RailTimescaleHolds
ResearchHoursActive session, thesis, working notes, runbook references
MarketsSeconds to minutesOrder books, funding, odds, liquidity, active watches
RewardsContinuousReal-time AXE earnings, protocol activity, contribution credits

You can collapse any rail when you don't need it. You can pin a single market or watch into a slot you don't have to scroll back to. The default layout assumes you are running one main session and watching the world from inside it.

Why a TUI

A cockpit that competes with browser tabs loses. Operators already live in terminals — for the order tools, the chain tools, the data tools. Axe joins that environment instead of asking you to leave it.

Three properties follow from the choice:

  • Latency: keystroke to render is bounded by the local machine, not by a hosted control plane
  • Composition: anything you can pipe into a shell can flow into an Axe session
  • Ownership: your session, your memory, your runbooks live on your filesystem unless you explicitly share them

Slash commands

The cockpit's verbs are slash commands. /perps-open and /poly-open frame sessions. /markets, /price, /book, /funding, /oi, /odds, /liquidity, and /resolution read state. /watch arms a tripwire. /automations schedules work. /model and /login configure inference. /runbook shares your work with the protocol.

The full surface is in the CLI reference.

Watches and the alert plane

Watches are the bridge between an active session and a closed laptop. A watch is a structured tripwire: a market expression, a condition, and a delivery. When the condition fires, Axe wakes the session — or pages you, depending on how the watch was configured.

Watches are first-class objects. You can list them, mute them, retire them, and ship them as runbooks. Operators who run good watches earn protocol rewards when other operators adopt their tripwires.

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