Rooms

Think of Cabinet as your home. In your home you have several rooms: one for the office, one for your studies, one for a side project, one that's personal. You walk into a room and everything in it belongs to that part of your life. You don't keep tax files in the kitchen.

A room is a top-level cabinet with its own pages, its own AI team, its own tasks, its own search, and its own look. Switch rooms and the whole workspace changes with you.

Switching rooms

The home button sits next to the cabinet logo and shows the current room's icon. Click it to:

  • Switch to another room.
  • Customize a room: name, icon, accent color, theme.
  • Add a new room.
  • Open a room in its own window.
  • Delete a room (it moves to trash, so it stays recoverable).

You are always inside a room, and Cabinet reopens where you left off, down to the exact page.

Each room is its own world

Rooms keep your contexts apart by default. Work never bleeds into Personal:

  • Agents and tasks are scoped to the room.
  • Search (⌘K) covers the current room. To look wider, turn on Search other rooms, and results show which room each match came from.
  • Theme follows the room, so you can tell at a glance which one you're in.

This is about focus, not a security sandbox: it keeps the right things in front of you and the rest out of the way. To share across rooms, you opt in explicitly.

Rooms vs. sub-cabinets

Inside a room you can still nest cabinets. A "Marketing" cabinet might hold "Launch" and "Ads", each with its own agents. Those are sub-cabinets: departments within the same room, and they roll up to it.

Rooms are the top level: separate spaces that never roll up into each other. Use sub-cabinets to organize one area of work. Use rooms to separate different areas entirely.

Clean, shareable URLs

Every room and page has a clean URL that mirrors the file tree:

/room/office/launch/brief
/room/office/marketing/-/tasks
/room/personal/journal/2026#trips

Paste one to a teammate and it opens exactly there, including a #section jump to a heading. Older links keep working.

Read on