Week of March 28: Your Workspace Learns the Org Chart
Week of March 28: Your Workspace Learns the Org Chart
This was a big week. 42 commits across backend and frontend — Supanova stopped thinking in flat lists and started thinking in departments, projects, and the tools your team already uses.
Organization
The Department Experience
Departments now have their own dedicated space. When you open a department, you see the team first — who's in it, what roles they hold, what's in motion. Monthly reports surface automatically so you're not chasing status updates across scattered threads. If you've been running multiple departments inside a single Supanova workspace view, this is the upgrade you've been waiting for.
Unit Operations Redesign
The Unit Operations view now leads with Team Members as the first tab. People first, process second. This aligns how you think about your teams with how Supanova presents them.
Projects
Project Source Materials
You can now attach source materials directly to a project. Research docs, briefs, reference files — they become part of the context your atoms already pull from, so the knowledge that would normally live in your head or a separate folder lives with the project itself. Upload once, and every task in the project benefits.
Project Context Bucket
Projects now have a short-term memory layer. Your atoms carry context across tasks within a project, so work that builds on previous tasks doesn't lose the thread. This is separate from source materials — it's the working memory your atoms accumulate as they execute.
Parallel Task Generation
Projects can now generate multiple tasks simultaneously. Instead of queuing them one at a time, projects create tasks in parallel. Larger initiatives get structured faster.
Bonds & Integrations
API Key Connections
Not every integration uses OAuth. Bonds now detect which authentication method is needed and support API key connections alongside OAuth. This opens up integrations that previously required manual setup.
External Tool Outputs
When your atoms use bonded integrations to produce work — spreadsheets, documents, records in external systems — those outputs are now tracked as artifacts tied to the task that created them. You can browse, preview, and download what your atoms produced in connected tools, all visible alongside the task.
External Execution Guardrails
Atoms using bonded tools now operate within safety rails. The system enforces boundaries on what atoms can do through external integrations, so connecting a tool doesn't mean giving atoms unrestricted access. Bond access levels from last week combine with these guardrails to give you layered control.
Bond-Aware Charters
Project charters now factor in what your connected tools can do. When your workspace sets acceptance criteria for a project, those criteria understand which bond capabilities are available. The planning layer and the integration layer now talk to each other.
Workflow
One-Click Operational Gates
When an atom needs your input to continue, the resolution flow is now a single click. Clearer labels tell you exactly what the atom is asking for, and the approval interface has been compressed to reduce the steps between your decision and the atom resuming work.
Activities Review Flow
Reviewing what happened in your workspace is now easier. Activity entries link directly to the relevant task, and a context modal lets you see the full picture without navigating away. You can review a day's worth of atom work from a single screen.
Under the Hood
Bond (external integrations) connections are more reliable — OAuth flows now finalize correctly even when the browser session drops mid-authorization. The Planner agent is now tool-agnostic, meaning it routes work without assuming which integration will handle it. Project lists load faster thanks to smarter preloading of task assignments. Atoms no longer try to work with URLs that shouldn't leave the workspace. And the question universe reduced its reasoning overhead for faster question generation.
Forty-three weeks in. Your workspace knows your org now. See you next Friday.