hi! we're The Orchestration Company (Dcouple, Inc).

we build ai-native tools for the new way work gets done: orchestrating — people describing outcomes, agents writing and changing software, and teams needing trusted systems around that work.

doozy is for the work you need done.

pane is for the software you ship.

morph is for the internal tools your team runs.

before dcouple, we built and ran a healthcare messaging product with 30m+ messages sent, six-figure arr, and hundreds of clinical customers. that taught us what software looks like when it has to earn trust inside real work; now we're building ai tools that carry that same trust into every knowledge workflow.

together, they point at the same thesis: as software becomes easier to create, the hard part shifts from using interfaces to trusting, sharing, and operating the work agents produce.

our products

doozy — a to-do list where every task comes with an agent that completes it. you give it work through voice, text, or ambient meeting capture. it connects to 800+ apps (gmail, slack, notion, hubspot, linear, google drive, and more) and executes tasks autonomously with your approval.

doozy to-do list view

three core primitives:

ears

passively captures meetings and voice memos without bots joining your calls. context from every conversation becomes actionable.

hands

connects to 800+ integrations and takes action: sends emails, updates crms, creates tickets, files documents, posts messages. everything requires human approval before execution.

brain

remembers how you work, your preferences, your context, and gets better over time. persistent memory across conversations means you never repeat yourself.

what it actually does, in the wild:

a co-founder used doozy to categorize 1,200 transactions, generate accounting ledgers, and file taxes across three states — saving $1,200 in prep fees.

a sales leader discovered a deal he didn't know existed when doozy reviewed meeting transcripts and auto-filled crm fields his team had missed.

doozy drafted 34 personalized follow-up emails in 10 minutes by pulling context from a user's crm. replies came back within minutes.

a student built a daily job finder entirely through voice — it runs every morning, searches for jobs, and populates a google sheet automatically.

live at usedoozy.com.

pane. a terminal-first ai agent manager.

the same way superhuman is an email client (not an email provider), pane is an agent client. you bring the agents. we make them fly.

open-source (agpl-3.0), keyboard-first, cross-platform. runs claude code, codex, aider, goose, or anything that ships tomorrow, each in its own isolated worktree with a built-in diff viewer and full git workflow.

pane agent manager screenshot

live at runpane.com.

morph. cloud workspaces for the internal software teams are already building with codex, claude code, or any terminal agent.

pane is for external software. morph is for internal software: import an existing github repo into a shared cloud workspace with auth, a database, and a collaborative vm where teammates can watch agent changes happen.

morph product analytics screenshot

live at trymorph.dev.

the team

parsa khazaeepoul, co-founder. ex-ai2 incubator, where he supported ai startup founders with customer discovery and go-to-market. employee #1 at two computer vision / vlm startups, including head of developer relations at moondream ai (8k+ github stars). multi-hackathon winner (openai, yc tech week). organized 17+ turing and nobel laureate speakers through turing minds at uw. hosts the seattle consumer ai founder meetup series through tactical gtm. b.s. in informatics from the university of washington (summa cum laude).

tyler brown, co-founder & cto. yc w17 alum. previously built a game studio that reached 2m users and deployed to 1,600 applebee's locations. ceo of bloomtext, a hipaa-compliant clinical messaging platform — a $250k arr saas business he runs almost entirely using doozy, from customer support to tax filing across three jurisdictions. background in making complex technology radically simple for non-technical users.