Dis Dat just dropped and it's doing something brutally obvious in retrospect: giving AI coding agents the same context you'd give a human coworker sitting next to you. Instead of typing paragraphs describing what's broken or wrestling with screenshot attachments, you hit a hotkey, point at the problem on your screen, and talk through it. The recording—including frames, audio, and intent—ships directly into your agent's context window.
What It Actually Does
The workflow is stupid simple: press ⌃⌥⌘Space to start recording, talk while pointing at whatever you want your AI agent to address, then stop and paste the link. Your agent sees exactly what you saw, hears what you were thinking about it, and can act on that combined context. It currently works with Cursor, Claude Code, Lovable, v0, and MCP support is 'coming soon' according to the site.
The Pricing Is Low Friction by Design
Dis Dat uses a classic freemium play: Basic is free with your first recordings, talk + point feedback, hosted links, and multilingual transcription. Pro runs $19/month for unlimited recordings (up to 5 minutes each), priority processing, and early access to new features. Notably, the 14-day Pro trial doesn't start until you explicitly upgrade inside the app—no card required upfront.
Mobile Is Where This Gets Interesting
The roadmap includes iOS and Android apps that let you 'react out loud' directly from your phone while browsing any page. Tap stop, and the recording transfers wirelessly to your Mac where a notification pops up with a copyable link ready to paste into your agent. If this lands well, it could fundamentally change how designers and PMs feed context into dev workflows without needing screen sharing.
Why This Matters for AI Agent Workflows
The bottleneck in human-AI collaboration isn't the model anymore—it's getting rich context into the loop. Screenshots lose intent. Text descriptions miss nuance. Dis Dat is essentially Loom purpose-built for agents instead of humans, which feels like an obvious gap that's been sitting wide open since coding assistants went mainstream.
Key Takeaways
- No more typing descriptions or wrestling with screenshot attachments—just talk + point
- Currently supports Cursor, Claude Code, Lovable, and v0; MCP support incoming
- Free tier is generous: first recordings, multilingual transcription, hosted links
- Pro at $19/month unlocks unlimited 5-minute recordings and priority processing
- Mobile apps on the roadmap could expand this beyond devs to designers and PMs
The Bottom Line
Dis Dat fills a gap that should've been obvious months ago. As AI coding agents become the primary interface for shipping software, tools like this that close the context loop between human intent and agent action are going to be essential infrastructure—not nice-to-have productivity hacks.