Argos
Back to blog

Published on 7/10/2026

Welcome to Argos: one console for your whole fleet

Argos is a web console that shows presence, security, and activity across your entire Windows PC fleet in real time, and this blog is where we document how it actually gets used — with real data and real cases, not generic theory. Welcome.

Managing ten, fifty, or two hundred Windows PCs with spreadsheets and generic remote-access tools doesn't scale. Every machine becomes an island: you don't know if it's online, whether the antivirus is still active, or what the user is doing right now.

Argos exists to solve exactly that.

One console, not a pile of loose tools

Instead of jumping between an inventory viewer, a remote-access tool, and a spreadsheet full of passwords, Argos brings it all into a single panel:

  • Real-time presence for every machine (online, away, offline).
  • CPU, RAM and disk metrics with history.
  • Security posture: antivirus, firewall, BitLocker.
  • Real remote control, with user consent.
  • Configurable alerts through the channels you already use (Telegram, webhook, email).

Built to operate, not just to look at

The difference between a pretty dashboard and a tool you actually use every day is in the details: alerts that don't storm on server restart, remote control that asks for explicit consent, every action getting audited.

That's what we're building with Argos — and this is just the beginning.

What this blog actually covers

We're not going to fill this space with generic "10 cybersecurity tips" lists that could apply to any product. Every category on this blog maps to a real part of Argos:

  • Product — the design and pricing decisions behind the platform: why flat pricing beats per-device billing, what an RMM is and when you actually need one.
  • Monitoring — presence, idle time, and per-app usage: how to get real operational visibility into a remote or hybrid team without micromanaging anyone.
  • Security — antivirus, firewall, BitLocker, and the gaps that creep in when nobody's watching one specific machine.
  • Use cases — dental clinics, call centers, collections offices: what Argos looks like solving one concrete problem in one concrete industry.
  • Automation — scheduled scripts, maintenance that runs itself, and the most common mistakes when automating a fleet.
  • Remote support — remote control, terminal access, and file transfer, without the friction of generic remote-access tools.

Why you can trust what's written here

This isn't generic content assembled by an AI that has never seen an RMM dashboard. Every post comes from three concrete sources: the actual telemetry we capture from fleets in production, the support tickets we resolve when something breaks on a real machine, and direct conversations with the people who manage twenty, a hundred, or two hundred Windows PCs every day. When we write that "an expired antivirus is the most common failure that makes no noise," that's not filler — it's what we watch repeat across real fleets.

That doesn't make us infallible, but it does make us honest: if something in the product is still limited or in progress, this blog says so, instead of selling an idealized version that doesn't match the console you'll actually use.

What to expect from here

New posts, with the same rule: if it wouldn't help someone actually managing a fleet, we don't publish it. Start with what an RMM is if the category is new to you, or jump straight to the interactive demo and see the console running with sample data.