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GRITT document chat and FUGA analysis

GRITT is a web application by Mind Your Axis for working with uploaded documents, source-grounded chat, web retrieval, speech tools and FUGA-assisted document analysis. It is designed for people who need to read, compare and analyse longer source material without losing the link between an answer and the underlying document context.

The application combines account-based document management with an AI chat interface. Users can return to earlier sessions, keep uploaded materials organised, and use GRITT as a focused workspace rather than a general public forum. Legal information is available before login, and the public Mind Your Axis site explains the product, educational use cases and FUGA method in more detail.

GRITT is intended for repeated work with the same body of material. A user may upload course notes, drafts, transcripts or other source material and then ask several follow-up questions without losing the document context. This makes the chat page different from a blank prompt form: the value is in the combination of session continuity, uploaded sources, retrieval where enabled, speech tools and structured FUGA analysis.

FUGA is the analysis layer for longer documents. It can help segment material, identify themes, support follow-up questions and give the user a better route through complex source text. Outputs should still be checked by the user, especially for high-stakes topics, but the workspace is designed to make reading, review and revision more organised.

A typical GRITT session starts with a user uploading a document and asking a concrete question such as: "Compare the argument in chapter two with the examples in the appendix." GRITT then answers inside the same workspace, keeps the conversation connected to the active material, and can show which passages or document references should be checked before relying on the answer. Follow-up questions can narrow the analysis, request a summary, ask for counterarguments, or turn the material into a study plan.

In FUGA-assisted review, the same material can be approached more systematically. The user can ask GRITT to identify the structure of a draft, separate claims from evidence, locate unresolved questions, or compare multiple uploaded files. This is useful for students, writers, researchers and professionals who need a calmer route through dense source material instead of a single one-off chatbot response.

Example output on an uploaded policy note might include a short answer, a list of cited source sections, a set of uncertainties to verify, and suggested follow-up questions. GRITT is not presented as a substitute for professional judgement; it is a workspace for reading, drafting, revision and analysis where the user remains responsible for checking the source material.

The planned free tier is deliberately narrower than paid access. It may use cheaper model settings and lower limits for uploads, retrieval, speech and analysis. If advertising is used for the free tier, the advertising boundary is the chat page for free-tier users only. Paid users should not see the free-tier advertising rail.

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Chat

Can you compare the argument in chapter two with the examples in the appendix?
In a typical GRITT session, the answer stays connected to uploaded source material. The workspace can summarise the relevant sections, identify caveats, point to passages the user should check, and suggest follow-up questions for deeper review.
What does FUGA add when the document is long or difficult?
FUGA adds a structured analysis layer for longer document work. It can help separate claims from evidence, compare uploaded files, identify unresolved questions and keep the user oriented while they revise, study or evaluate source material.