Projects

The TENSA Engineering ecosystem.

TENSA Engineering is the umbrella engineering company behind NeuroCore, Argus ACLI, and Argus Lab. Each project has a different role, but they share the same foundation: persistent understanding, grounded system awareness, and controlled AI interaction.

TENSA Engineering stacked logo

System model

Platform. Product. Training and validation environment.

The ecosystem is intentionally layered. NeuroCore provides the platform and control architecture. Argus ACLI is the first practical product built on top of that platform. Argus Lab is the active validation environment for Argus ACLI today, and its long-term direction is realistic Linux troubleshooting training.

Project roles

Three systems, one direction.

Each project has a clear responsibility. The goal is to keep the public story understandable without blurring the technical boundaries between the platform, the product layer, the validation environment, and the future training direction.

Product / Distribution

Argus ACLI

Argus ACLI is the first practical product built on NeuroCore. It is a read-only Linux system intelligence tool that turns real telemetry into findings, severity, recommendations, and raw evidence.

Explore Argus ACLI →
Validation / Future Trainer

Argus Lab

Argus Lab is the active validation environment for Argus ACLI and the future Linux troubleshooting trainer. It uses real systems, controlled faults, resettable scenarios, and evidence-backed diagnostics to build and test real troubleshooting skill.

Explore Argus Lab →

Boundary rule

TENSA Engineering is the public home for the ecosystem.

TENSA Engineering is the public brand and engineering home for the ecosystem. The website explains the systems, teaches the ideas behind them, and helps people understand the direction. The active implementation repositories are currently private while the projects mature, and public technical artifacts will be added when they are ready to support users, builders, or releases.

NeuroCore governs

The platform controls runtime flow, tool access, execution boundaries, and system interaction.

Argus explains

The product layer turns Linux system signals into clear diagnostic understanding.

Argus Lab validates

The lab validates Argus ACLI today and points toward future real-Linux troubleshooting training.