Products Built by 3D Tech Solutions

These tools are designed to support real‑world use in AI, compliance, education, and operations. All products are developed in‑house and made available as open source or with free and paid access.

Code Scalpel

A code analysis and refactoring tool that lets AI work with code as a structured graph, reducing token costs and improving accuracy in AI‑assisted development.
folder bridge
Extends Obsidian’s single‑root vault by mounting external folders as native directories, without copying, duplicating, or symlinking files.

Coming Soon

Terms Guardian

An NLP‑powered browser extension that analyzes Terms of Service and Privacy Policies with readability grades, summaries, and key clause insights.

Hunt Master Academy Banner

A learning platform designed to provide structured education and training for hunters. It helps users build skills and knowledge through clear, organized instruction that supports real‑world application.

Common Questions

How does Code Scalpel reduce token usage and improve accuracy?

Instead of passing large chunks of raw code to an AI model, Code Scalpel analyzes the code once and exposes it as a structured graph (dependencies, data flow, relationships). This lets AI tools request only the relevant parts, reducing unnecessary context and lowering token costs while improving precision.

Yes. Code Scalpel is designed to run locally and supports offline‑first workflows, making it suitable for teams that cannot send source code to external services or cloud-based AI tools.

Code Scalpel is best suited for developers and teams using AI for refactoring, auditing, or large‑codebase changes, especially where cost control, correctness, and predictable behavior matter more than free‑form generation.

Folder Bridge lets you keep your existing folder structure intact while still working from a single Obsidian vault view. This avoids reorganizing, duplicating, or breaking workflows that already depend on where files live.

No. Folder Bridge does not modify files, paths, or permissions. External folders remain exactly where they are; they are simply presented as native directories inside the vault.

Folder Bridge works well for users who manage notes alongside projects, repositories, research folders, or shared directories, and want everything visible in Obsidian without turning the vault into a dumping ground.