Launching today

SkillForge
Turn Screen Recordings into Agent-Ready Skills
64 followers
Turn Screen Recordings into Agent-Ready Skills
64 followers
First app to turn your Cross-App daily workflow into an Agent skill (like for OpenClaw). Stop writing automation scripts by hand. SkillForge transforms a simple screen recording into a structured, replayable skill your AI agent can execute autonomously. How it works: 1. Record — do the task naturally 2. Extract — AI analyzes every frame and action 3. Review — edit the step-by-step workflow 4. Deploy — export as SKILL.md for any agent Works with any App. Free recording + 100 signup credits.






SkillForge
SkillForge
Absolutely agree! The most valuable investment in 2026 is turning your daily personal workflow, which usually spread across multiple apps, into a fully automated agentic skill that allows your personal agent to take over on your local computer.
That’s exactly why I built SkillForge so that I can record my screen once and have my everyday work completely automated.
Before, I was struggling to guide OpenClaw to handle cross-software, multi-step, multi-window tasks. It’s extremely hard to write and describe a workflow that is both detailed and flexible at the same time.
This pain point really struck me, and I decided to build the tool myself:
1. Record everything in just one day—all my daily workflows
2. Build SkillForge to convert screen recordings into agent skill .md files
3. Feed them into OpenClaw
4. Boom!!! One shot—and it works!!!
Now my OpenClaw has been running for 5 days straight, following the exact same screen and app interactions from my recording. This “aha” moment inspired me deeply to share this tool with all my friends and employees for their daily use.
And now, I’d love to share it with our community and make it completely FREE for public good. Welcome to the new era—personalize your agent!
Your future is here: skillforge.expert
Miro
Super cool idea — surely the easiest way of saying "here is what I do, do it for me".
How does it handle failures midway through? Especially if the workflow is a little bit longer, does it just fail or have some kind of retry logic?
Especially worried when the skills is about creating and not just reading data, the ability to fail gracefully will be important.