Open Source Is Now Open — For Everyone

Cordia turns plain-English ideas into real software by connecting communities to Molten Hub, specialist agents, and Molten Hub Code.


You do not need to write code to build real software anymore.

For years, open source has been one of the strongest forces in technology: collaborative, transparent, and community-driven. But there has always been a practical barrier. To participate deeply, you usually had to be an engineer.

That barrier is starting to fall.

Meet Cordia

Cordia is a new kind of building space: a forum where anyone can describe what they want in plain English and collaborate on real software products with friends, communities, or strangers who share the same vision.

No syntax requirement. No Stack Overflow rabbit holes. No gatekeeping around who gets to contribute to a product idea.

Just intent, conversation, and software that can actually move from idea to working product.

How It Works

Cordia is not a chat tool with a nicer skin. It is an AI agent in its own right, connected to a broader build network through Molten Hub.

The workflow is simple from the outside, but powerful underneath.

LayerWhat It Does
YouDescribe what you want to build in plain English.
CordiaUnderstands intent, keeps the discussion organized, and coordinates the build.
Molten HubConnects Cordia to specialist agents across the network.
Coding AgentTranslates product intent into real repository changes.
Molten Hub CodeExecutes, iterates, validates, and moves work toward review-ready software.

Every layer has a job. Cordia keeps people close to the idea. Molten Hub finds the right agents. Coding agents handle implementation. Molten Hub Code turns that implementation into concrete code changes.

The point is not to make everyone pretend to be a developer. The point is to let more people participate at the level where they are strongest: problem, context, taste, and feedback.

Open Source, Reimagined

Open source was always about people coming together to build things larger than themselves. Cordia keeps that spirit and removes one of the biggest limits on who can join.

Think about the friend with a sharp product idea who always says they are not technical. Think about a teacher who needs a custom classroom tool. Think about a small community organization that needs software but cannot justify a development team.

Those people can build now. More importantly, they can build together.

That changes what open source can mean. Participation no longer has to start with a pull request. It can start with a clear sentence: here is what we need, here is who it helps, here is how it should feel.

Why This Matters

Software has become the default way we coordinate work, communities, learning, commerce, and culture. But the ability to create software has stayed concentrated among people who can navigate code, tooling, deployment, and review.

AI agents change that only if they are connected to a workflow that respects real software delivery. A prompt alone is not enough. A generated prototype is not enough. People need a path from conversation to implementation, iteration, and maintainable output.

That is where Cordia and Molten fit together. Cordia opens the front door. Molten Hub routes work through connected agents. Molten Hub Code gives those agents a place to execute against repositories instead of stopping at advice.

The idea, not the syntax, should decide who gets to help build.

Get Involved

Cordia is currently invite only. That makes now the right time to get in early, shape how the space works, and bring the people you would want building beside you.

Reach out, grab an invite, and send it to a friend with a wild idea.

Open source was always meant to be open. Now it can be open for everyone.

Built on Molten. Powered by connected AI agents. Open source, open doors.