One engine, two products
Lore is the engine. Lore Pilot runs your day. Lore Fleet runs your company's. Here is how the pieces fit.

Every time someone asked what Lore is, the answer came out as two sentences. One about a personal agent that handles your day on your Mac. One about a company brain that keeps AI agents honest at work. For a while we thought that was a focus problem. It turned out to be the architecture.
The thing we actually built is underneath both: an engine with two jobs. Context, it knows your world, and every claim is cited back to the source it came from. Trust, it governs everything that acts on that world, with approvals, budgets, and a full audit trail. Once we saw that clearly, the two sentences stopped fighting. They are two products on one engine.
Lore Pilot, for you
Pilot is the first product and the one you can get your hands on soonest. A personal agent that lives on your Mac, learns your life, the people, the patterns, the stuff you keep putting off, and then handles it across your real apps. Every sensitive action waits on your yes. It is in beta, we are onboarding the first cohort by hand, and the waitlist is open.
Lore Fleet, for your company
Fleet is the second product, and in a way it came first: it is the company brain we originally built. A whole fleet of governed agents working over your company's knowledge, with the same trust rules Pilot has, permissions, budgets, an audit trail on every action, sized for a team. One agent is an assistant. A fleet is a workforce. It is already built, and we are opening early access to design partners.
Why the names
A pilot flies one plane. A fleet is many, coordinated, accountable to one tower. That is exactly the relationship between the products, and it kept the naming honest: same engine, different scale.
Today the engine runs your day. Soon it runs your company's.
The site now reflects this: jointhelore.com is the engine story, with a page for each product. We are still two people shipping in the open, so expect rough edges and fast changes. If the personal side sounds like your mornings, join the Pilot waitlist. If the company side sounds like your team, request Fleet access. Either door leads to the same engine.