Decision containment
Examples
Examples that prove the boundary.
Each example shows a real failure mode, the containment pattern that stops it, and the artifacts you can inspect afterward. Use this index to move from buyer-facing proof to the full technical walkthrough.
Featured
Start with the examples that explain the product fastest.
LLM decision containment — absurd offers never reach a customer
Explore → Featured example Drive-Thru OrderingFallible sensor containment — absurd parses never reach POS
Explore → Featured example Medical IntakeLLM extraction gated by clinician approval
Explore → Featured example Appointment BookingYour first verified app
Explore →By failure mode
Choose the containment pattern you need to inspect.
Fallible sensor containment
Model interpretations of messy input stay candidate evidence until the ontology accepts them.
Builder tutorial
The fastest path to understanding invariants, replay, and proof surfaces on your own app.
Effects and replay
Examples focused on continuous monitoring, effect boundaries, and deterministic replays.
Shared reality for multi-agent systems
Multiple agents coordinate through one derived worldview instead of brittle workflow state.
By industry
Use the buyer's domain language when possible.
Customer-facing commitments
Workflows where the wrong outward-facing action creates immediate legal, financial, or brand risk.
LLM decision containment — absurd offers never reach a customer
Explore → Air Canada Refund PolicyLLM decision containment — hallucinated refund policies never become paid refunds
Explore → Drive-Thru OrderingFallible sensor containment — absurd parses never reach POS
Explore →Operations and care workflows
Examples that show accepted facts, scheduling truth, and review-heavy operational actions.
Multi-agent and high-stakes automation
Proof surfaces for shared reality, catastrophe boundaries, and replay after the fact.
Next step
Use examples as the bridge between marketing and docs.
Start with the failure mode you care about, inspect the example that proves the boundary, then open the walkthrough when you want the full mechanics.