Most AI tools sit there waiting for you to type something. Truffle doesn't. While you sleep, your Truffle is working. Re-reading the documents you fed it last week. Connecting the meeting transcript from Tuesday to the spec you wrote in March. Noticing that the supplier issue you flagged in an email maps to the failure mode your QA lead mentioned three months ago. 24/7 inference. The device is always on, always thinking, always building a sharper model of what you and your team actually care about. This is the part of local AI that the cloud version can't really do. When you're paying per token, "always running" is a budget problem. When the compute sits on your desk and the electricity bill is the only meter, continuous inference stops being a feature you ration and starts being the default state. The compounding is the interesting part. Day one, Truffle knows what you uploaded. Day thirty, it knows how your projects connect, which threads keep resurfacing, which problems you've solved before and forgotten. Day ninety, it's surfacing connections you wouldn't have made yourself, because no human has the working memory to hold a quarter of context at once. Cloud models start every conversation as strangers. Truffle starts every conversation as someone who's been paying attention. Your knowledge. Your context. Your machine. Running while you're not.
About us
Truffle is a fully local, Agentic Workstation. All of the capabilities of AI while the data never leaves your system. Truffle integrates with what you already use. Standard APIs, custom CLIs, internal tools, MCP servers. We've turned apps into APIs the agent can call, and we can extend in any direction your stack requires.
- Website
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www.truffle.net
External link for Deepshard, Inc.
- Industry
- Technology, Information and Internet
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2023
Employees at Deepshard, Inc.
Updates
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On March 5, 1975, The Homebrew Computer Club gathered some of the brightest minds of tech, including Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak with a shared belief that computers should be accessible to everyone. At the time, IBM had just released a groundbreaking portable computer, but at a $18,000 price point intended mostly for scientists and business professionals. Every week, The Homebrew Club met in a garage in Menlo Park, California with new prototypes made up of spare parts to get closer to the computer of the future, one that anyone can afford and use. One of the first Apple prototypes was debuted at a club meeting, and it wasn’t long before the ideas developed in that garage were shaping a new era of personal computers for the masses.
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