Your dashboard
Sign in at engineer9.ai to reach your dashboard. It’s where you see what engineer9 has learned and manage what it can do. Most of engineer9’s day-to-day work happens in Slack, so the dashboard is for oversight and configuration.
A quick rule of thumb: you change what engineer9 can access from the dashboard, and you change what it knows by talking to it in Slack.
Dashboard (home)
Section titled “Dashboard (home)”An at-a-glance view of your agent’s health: session count, approvals (approved vs denied), memory size (playbooks and daily logs), and whether engineer9 is connected and listening in Slack. Each card links to the full view. Recent sessions are listed below.
Sessions
Section titled “Sessions”The history of conversations between your team and engineer9: each thread, how many turns it ran, when it was last active, and the last message. View-only: it’s a record, not a place to act.
Approvals
Section titled “Approvals”A running history of every tool-use decision: what was approved, what was denied, and which patterns have been auto-promoted to “always allow” after repeated approvals (the threshold, e.g. 3, is shown).
Memory
Section titled “Memory”Read what engineer9 knows: its main memory, the playbooks it has saved, and its daily logs. View-only: engineer9 writes its own memory as it learns. To change what it knows, tell it in Slack. See Memory.
Channels
Section titled “Channels”Control which Slack channels engineer9 is active in. This is the one place access is granted or revoked:
- Active channels lists the channels engineer9 can see, each with a Remove button.
- Add channels lets you search your workspace’s channels and Add them.
engineer9 starts with access to nothing and only ever reads the channels listed here (default-deny). See Channels & access.
The roster engineer9 has built (who owns what) plus system dependencies it has picked up, rendered from what it learned in your channels. View-only. To correct an ownership that’s wrong, tell engineer9 in Slack; it updates the roster as it learns.
Skills
Section titled “Skills”The capabilities your agent has loaded. Each skill lists its tools and the approval level each tool requires (color-coded: none / approve / confirm / dynamic). Here you can:
- Install an integration skill (e.g. Linear). You enter its credentials inline, and they’re stored encrypted.
- Uninstall a skill (built-in skills like memory and shell can’t be removed). Uninstalling asks for confirmation.
See Skills overview.
Schedules
Section titled “Schedules”The recurring tasks engineer9 runs. Each shows its cadence, whether it’s active or paused, and its recent runs (status, duration, output). You can:
- Pause / resume a schedule.
- Delete a schedule (with confirmation).
- Expand a row to see run history.
Creating a schedule is done in Slack: ask engineer9 (e.g. “post an EOD summary every weekday at 5 PM”). See Scheduling.
Settings
Section titled “Settings”Workspace and agent information: team name, workspace ID, install date, model, and who you’re signed in as. The Credentials card lists the encrypted credentials stored for your agent, names only, never values. The Danger zone links to Slack app management to uninstall engineer9 from your workspace.
Billing
Section titled “Billing”Your plan and upgrade options. Upgrades are handled by reaching out: the upgrade buttons email the team. See pricing for current plans.
Related
Section titled “Related”- Quick start: get set up
- How it works
- Channels & access