Thank you so much for all the upvotes and comments yesterday β honestly didn't expect this much love on day one. Reading every single comment is incredibly motivating.
For everyone who wants to follow along, suggest features, or just chat β we just opened our Discord community: https://discord.gg/3JhATJGs
Your feedback is already shaping what we build next. π
The friction most devs hit with multiple AI coding agents isn't loud enough to complain about, but it's constant. Skills Manager goes after exactly that, and the approach is smarter than it looks on the surface.
Treating agent skills as a modular ecosystem instead of siloed configurations is a meaningful shift. Copying a skill between agents stops being a workaround and becomes a native workflow. That's the kind of change that feels small until you realize it's quietly redefining how coding agents are supposed to interoperate.
There's a positioning angle here too. A skills hub for AI agents carries more weight than skills manager, especially if this expands beyond local Windows environments. The moment it touches cloud-native or web based agents, the category story gets a lot bigger.
Curious whether that's the direction you're already thinking about.
AI Skills Manager
Thank you so much for all the upvotes and comments yesterday β honestly didn't expect this much love on day one. Reading every single comment is incredibly motivating.
For everyone who wants to follow along, suggest features, or just chat β we just opened our Discord community: https://discord.gg/3JhATJGs
Your feedback is already shaping what we build next. π
Visdiff
Congrats on the launch! π
The friction most devs hit with multiple AI coding agents isn't loud enough to complain about, but it's constant. Skills Manager goes after exactly that, and the approach is smarter than it looks on the surface.
Treating agent skills as a modular ecosystem instead of siloed configurations is a meaningful shift. Copying a skill between agents stops being a workaround and becomes a native workflow. That's the kind of change that feels small until you realize it's quietly redefining how coding agents are supposed to interoperate.
There's a positioning angle here too. A skills hub for AI agents carries more weight than skills manager, especially if this expands beyond local Windows environments. The moment it touches cloud-native or web based agents, the category story gets a lot bigger.
Curious whether that's the direction you're already thinking about.