James Lee

Getting Started with Fredrin: A Beginner's Guide


If you’ve ever wished you could hand off a stack of small tasks and have them all worked on at once instead of one at a time, Fredrin is built for exactly that. This guide is for first-time users. No prior setup knowledge required - by the end you’ll understand what Fredrin is, how it works, and how to turn a plain-English request into a task it can run.

What Is Fredrin?

Fredrin is a desktop kanban board for running many AI-coding tickets in parallel.

Let’s unpack that one piece at a time:

Think of it as a team of tireless assistants, each one quietly working on a different task, while you watch their progress move across a board.

The Big Idea: One Ticket, One Worker

The heart of Fredrin is a simple rule: one ticket, one Worker.

A Worker is a single AI-coding session dedicated to one ticket. Each Worker gets its own isolated copy of the project to work in, so the tasks never trip over each other. While one Worker is writing a blog post, another can be fixing a bug, and a third can be updating a settings page - all at the same time, and none of them interfering with the others.

This is where the productivity comes from. You’re no longer the bottleneck. You describe the work, press a button, and many things happen at once.

How Work Moves: The Five Columns

Every ticket travels left to right across five columns. You don’t have to memorize a process - the board updates itself automatically as work happens.

  1. Backlog - The task has been written down but hasn’t started yet. It’s waiting for you to press Run.
  2. Running - A Worker is actively on the job right now.
  3. Blocked - The Worker hit a question it can’t answer on its own and needs your input before continuing.
  4. Review - The Worker finished. Now it’s your turn to glance at the result and decide: ship it, or send it back with notes.
  5. Completed - You approved the work (or the change was merged). Done.

The beauty of this flow is that the board moves on its own. When you press Run, the ticket slides into Running. When the Worker finishes, it slides into Review. The only manual steps are the human decisions: starting work, answering questions, and giving the final thumbs-up.

Turning a Request Into a Ticket

The most practical skill in Fredrin is learning to turn an everyday request into a good ticket. The trick is to make each ticket one clear, self-contained piece of work.

Here are a few worked examples.

Example 1: A simple content change

What you’d say to a person: “Hey, can you add a short FAQ section to the pricing page?”

As a ticket:

Example 2: Splitting a big ask into several tickets

Sometimes a single request is really several tasks wearing a trench coat. Fredrin shines when you split them, because each piece becomes its own Worker running in parallel.

What you’d say to a person: “Let’s polish the website before launch - the homepage needs a clearer headline, the footer is missing a privacy link, and the blog needs a dark mode.”

As three tickets:

Press Run on all three and they’re worked on at the same time, rather than waiting in line.

Example 3: A bug report

What you’d say to a person: “The newsletter signup button doesn’t do anything on mobile.”

As a ticket:

What makes a good ticket?

A Typical First Session

Here’s what getting started actually feels like:

  1. Write a few tickets in the Backlog - one for each thing you want done.
  2. Press Run on the ones you want started. Watch them move to Running.
  3. Check back in. Some tickets land in Review with finished work. If one moved to Blocked, it has a question waiting for you - answer it and it keeps going.
  4. Review the results. For each finished ticket, take a quick look. Happy? Mark it Completed. Not quite right? Send it back with a note and it’ll have another go.

That’s the whole loop. Write, run, review, repeat.

Why People Use Fredrin

Tips for Newcomers

Wrapping Up

Fredrin turns your to-do list into a board of parallel, AI-powered work. You write tickets in plain language, press Run, and watch tasks move from Backlog to Completed - stepping in only to answer questions and approve results.

The mental model is simple: one ticket, one Worker, many at once. Master the art of writing one clear ticket, and you’ve mastered Fredrin.

Now write your first three tickets and press Run.