Research and synthesis, in minutes
The slow part of research was never the reading. It’s the gathering, the cross-checking, the holding of six half-answers in your head while you hunt for a seventh. By the time you’ve got enough to write something down, you’ve forgotten which tab said what. And the AI shortcut — paste the question, take the confident paragraph — trades the slowness for a worse problem: you can’t tell if any of it is true.
A Skynet research agent fixes both ends. It does the gathering and the reading, then gives you a synthesis where every claim is traceable — click a sentence, see the source it came from. Fast and checkable, not fast and hopeful.
Ask the real question, not a search query
Most research starts with a question you already know the answer to (“what is X”) because that’s what search engines reward. The interesting questions are comparative and conditional: which option fits our constraints, what’s changed since last quarter, where do these two sources disagree. Those are the ones that cost you an afternoon.
Hand that kind of question to the agent and it does what you’d do with more patience — pulls the relevant material, reads all of it, and lays the answer out so you can see the reasoning, not just the conclusion. When the question is a comparison, it builds the comparison: options side by side, on the dimensions you care about, with the trade-offs called out instead of buried.
Give it the sources and the question
Point the agent at what it should read — uploaded documents, a folder of PDFs, your connected Notion and Slack, or the open web. Then ask the actual question. Not “summarize this,” but “which of these three vendors meets our compliance requirements, and where do they fall short.”
Get a cited synthesis
The agent reads everything and writes a structured answer: the finding up front, the supporting detail under it, and a citation on every claim. Comparisons come back as a side-by-side you can scan. Nothing is asserted without a source attached to it.
Drill into any claim
Doubt a line? Click its citation and land on the exact passage it came from. You’re not re-running the research to check it — you’re reading the receipt. This is the part that makes the output usable in a decision instead of a starting point for one.
Refresh when the sources move
Sources change. Pricing updates, a doc gets revised, a new release lands. Re-run the same synthesis and the agent re-reads the current sources and tells you what’s different — so the answer stays live instead of going stale the day after you wrote it.
Here’s the kind of question that’s worth handing over rather than doing by hand:
You get back a ranked comparison with the contract clause behind each point linked inline — and the ambiguous bits surfaced rather than smoothed over, which is usually where the real risk hides.
Across your stuff and the open web
The agent isn’t limited to a search box. Connect your sources and it treats your internal documents as first-class material — the Notion spec, the support tickets, the PDFs nobody’s read since they were signed. It reads those alongside the public web, so the synthesis reflects what your team actually knows, not just what’s been published.
Because Skynet builds unified memory from the sources you connect, the agent already has context before you ask. It knows which vendor you’re on, what your last research run concluded, what “our seat count” means. You’re not re-explaining your situation every time — you’re picking up where the last question left off.
That’s the difference between a chatbot and a research agent. One answers from whatever it happened to absorb. The other reads the specific sources you trust, shows you exactly where each claim came from, and keeps the answer current as those sources move.
Frequently asked questions
Both your own material and the open web. Upload documents or a folder, connect tools like Notion and Slack, and the agent reads those alongside live web sources. You control what it draws from for any given question.
Yes. The synthesis attaches a citation to each claim, and clicking it takes you to the exact passage in the source. If the agent can't support a statement from your sources, it tells you rather than filling the gap with a guess.
That's the point. Connect your documents, PDFs, Notion, and Slack, and the agent treats them as primary sources. Internal knowledge and public research land in the same cited synthesis.
Re-run a synthesis and the agent re-reads the current state of every source — web pages and your connected documents both — then reports what changed since last time. The answer stays current instead of freezing on the day you first asked.