Category

AI Agents AI Tools

AI Agents are autonomous systems that can perform tasks, make decisions, and interact with users or other software using AI-driven logic. They range from personal assistants and customer support bots to complex workflow automation and research agents. These tools enhance efficiency by handling repetitive tasks, retrieving insights, and acting based on real-time data.

609 tools in this category

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Ollama
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Ollama is a local AI platform for running, managing, and sharing open models on your own machine or private infrastructure. It makes it easy to pull models, serve them through an API, and integrate local inference into developer workflows without relying on a fully managed cloud stack. Teams use Ollama for privacy-sensitive assistants, internal tools, offline experimentation, and rapid testing of open-weight models across laptops, workstations, and servers. It is especially useful for developers, operators, and AI builders who want quick setup with less operational overhead. What makes Ollama distinctive is how approachable it is: it packages model runtime, distribution, and deployment into a streamlined experience that helps people get productive with local AI in minutes instead of spending days on configuration.

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OpenAgentd
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OpenAgentd is a self-hosted AI-agent OS that runs entirely on the user’s machine. It provides a web cockpit, streaming chat, persistent editable memory, tool use, workspace file browsing, image viewing, local voice transcription, scheduling and multi-agent teams with lead-worker delegation. Agents can read and write files, run shell commands, search the web, generate media, manage todos and extend capabilities via skills or MCP servers. The tool is for users who want a local, inspectable alternative to cloud-only agent workspaces. It is notable now because privacy, long-running autonomy and multi-agent coordination are converging into desktop systems rather than isolated chat tabs.

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Together AI
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Together AI is an AI inference and training cloud platform that provides fast, cost-effective access to open-weight models. It offers fine-tuning, inference endpoints, and a startup program for early-stage companies building on open AI. Targeted at developers and startups who want an alternative to proprietary model APIs with transparent pricing and open-model support.

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SynapseVault
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just launched SynapseVault: long-term memory for AI agents (ChatGPT/Claude/etc.) so you don't have to keep repeating preferences.

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Cognato AI
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Cognato AI provides version control, auditability, and compliance infrastructure specifically designed for AI agents. As organizations deploy AI agents that make autonomous decisions and modify systems, Cognato AI tracks agent actions, maintains version history, and generates compliance-ready audit trails. Featured on Show HN on June 7, 2026, the platform targets enterprise engineering and compliance teams who need to prove what their AI agents did, when, and why. It addresses a critical gap in the agent ecosystem: while tools like GitHub handle code versioning, nobody was versioning agent behavior and decisions. Cognato AI fills this niche with purpose-built tooling for agent governance, making it essential for regulated industries deploying autonomous AI workflows.

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Framer
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Website design/build/launch platform with CMS, localization, multi-domain hosting, and collaboration/governance.

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11x
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11x is an AI go-to-market platform that provides digital workers for revenue teams, including AI sales development and phone agents that operate across outbound and inbound workflows. Its flagship workers handle tasks like prospect engagement, meeting generation, pipeline building, lead follow-up, and real-time phone conversations, giving teams an always-on automation layer that behaves more like a specialized teammate than a rigid workflow bot. The platform is aimed at organizations that want to scale pipeline creation and customer contact without linearly expanding headcount. Because 11x positions its workers as enterprise-ready and deeply embedded in operations, it fits sales teams looking for AI agents that can run continuously, personalize outreach, and help revive dormant leads. It stands out as a practical agentic automation tool for GTM execution rather than a generic chatbot or simple rules-based automation product.

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Maestro
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Maestro turns an issue tracker into an execution layer for AI coding agents. The project coordinates agent work by dispatching issues, managing runtimes, choosing providers, tracking evidence, and making autonomous engineering more operable at team scale. It is aimed at engineering teams, agencies, and technical operators who already use GitHub-style issue workflows but need a safer bridge between task planning and AI-agent execution. Instead of manually copying tickets into terminals, Maestro treats issues as the control surface and keeps proof, runtime state, and provider coordination attached to the work. The repository surfaced in fresh GitHub AI-coding and workflow-automation searches with clear docs and active stars, making it a strong developer-tool candidate for Smartoolbox.

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pi-hosts
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pi-hosts is an MCP-style utility that gives the Pi coding agent structured, safer access to servers through named SSH targets. Instead of forcing an agent to rediscover hostnames, SSH syntax, OS details, package managers, service managers, or Docker status each time, pi-hosts exposes typed host tools with target resolution, cached facts, command risk checks, connection reuse, and JSONL audit logs. It is built for developers and operators who already use Pi for coding or infrastructure assistance and want remote server workflows to be faster, more repeatable, and easier to inspect. The recent Show HN launch makes it relevant to the growing ecosystem of agent-specific infrastructure tools around SSH, operations, and guarded execution.

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Algolia AI Search
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Algolia AI Search is a search and discovery platform that combines fast retrieval, ranking, personalization, and AI-ready relevance controls for websites and applications. Teams can use it to build product search, documentation search, recommendations, hybrid retrieval, and RAG-style experiences where users need accurate answers from structured content. Ecommerce teams, SaaS companies, marketplaces, media sites, and developer platforms can use Algolia to improve discovery and reduce the engineering burden of maintaining search infrastructure. It is especially useful when speed, relevance tuning, and analytics matter at production scale. What makes Algolia AI Search stand out is its operational maturity: it blends traditional search performance with AI search patterns in a system built for high-traffic products.

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Foreman
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Foreman by Northwood Systems is a self-hosted LLM gateway for routing coding-agent and application traffic across model providers with cost, cache and policy awareness. It runs as one Go binary inside a team’s network, keeps provider keys in environment variables, exposes OpenAI and Anthropic-compatible surfaces, pins conversations while prompt caches are warm, and records routing decisions in a queryable ledger. Developers can point Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, Pi and similar harnesses at Foreman, then enforce budgets, inspect trace IDs, compare rejected alternatives, and decide when cheaper models are safe enough. The July 8 Show HN launch and official Apache-2.0 repository verify concrete docs for gateway APIs, policies, client setup, deployment and spend summaries.

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Butterbase
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Butterbase is an open-source, AI-native backend-as-a-service that packages Postgres, authentication, storage, functions, an AI gateway and MCP support into a developer platform agents can operate against. It is designed for builders who want Supabase-like backend primitives with an agent-friendly control layer, especially teams experimenting with coding agents, MCP workflows and AI-generated applications. The GitHub repository was created in May 2026 and has already attracted significant attention, which suggests real demand around infrastructure that agents can inspect and modify during real app builds. For Smartoolbox users, Butterbase is most relevant as a developer productivity and agent-infrastructure tool rather than a consumer app.

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Hugging Face
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Hugging Face is a central platform for AI models, datasets, demos, and machine learning collaboration. Developers can discover open models, host repositories, test demos in Spaces, and build applications around transformers, diffusion models, and other AI assets. It is useful for researchers, builders, educators, and companies that want a shared hub for model discovery and deployment workflows. Hugging Face stands out because it combines community distribution with practical infrastructure, making it one of the easiest places to move from model exploration to working AI prototypes. The breadth of models and community projects also makes it valuable for competitive research, product benchmarking, and rapid AI capability discovery.

Humwork A2P Marketplace connects AI agents with verified human experts when autonomous workflows hit a wall. The platform is designed for coding agents, research agents, and operations agents that need fast human fallback on tasks they cannot resolve alone, passing context through MCP so the handoff feels native instead of manual. That makes it useful for teams deploying AI agents in production who want stronger completion rates across software engineering, design, strategy, and other knowledge work. Humwork positions itself as an always-available human layer rather than a general freelancer marketplace, with rapid matching and direct expert intervention inside agent workflows. What makes it unique is the agent-to-person model itself: it extends AI systems with on-demand human judgment instead of pretending every hard edge can be solved by automation alone.

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Guesty MCP Server
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Guesty MCP Server is an open-source Model Context Protocol server that connects AI clients to Guesty property-management accounts. It exposes tools for reservations, listings, guests, calendars, financial reports, operations, reviews, messaging, pricing, tasks, webhooks, IoT, and property-health workflows, letting Claude, ChatGPT, Copilot, Cline, and other MCP-compatible clients answer questions or perform property-management actions from structured Guesty data. The project is useful for short-term-rental operators, property managers, automation builders, and agencies that manage Guesty portfolios and want AI assistants inside operational workflows. It launched on Show HN as the first MCP server for Guesty, and the npm registry plus official GitHub repo verify installability, README details, MIT licensing, and production use on real rentals.

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skills.sh
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skills.sh is a platform for discovering, sharing, and reusing skills that extend AI agents with repeatable capabilities. It helps builders package prompts, procedures, tool instructions, and workflow knowledge into portable skills instead of burying them inside scattered chat histories or project notes. Developers can use it to standardize coding-agent behavior, share internal operating patterns, and give assistants consistent ways to perform specialized tasks. It is useful for teams adopting Claude Code, Cursor, Codex-style CLIs, and custom agent stacks that need reusable context. skills.sh stands out because it treats agent behavior as an ecosystem artifact: skills can become installable, inspectable building blocks that make AI workflows easier to maintain across tools and teams.

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Selvedge
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Selvedge is a local MCP server that captures why AI agents change code, creating long-term memory for AI-coded codebases. Its official site describes an agent-callable system for Claude Code, Cursor and Copilot that logs reasoning into a SQLite file under a project-local .selvedge directory. That is valuable for teams using AI coding assistants because the final diff often shows what changed but not why the agent chose that path, rejected alternatives, or followed certain assumptions. Selvedge helps preserve design rationale, auditability and handoff context inside the repository workflow. It is notable now because agent-generated code is becoming common enough that codebases need memory for decisions, not just commits and comments.

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SVAHNAR
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SVAHNAR is a platform for building and deploying AI agents as working products instead of one-off chat demos. Its homepage positions the service around declarative Agents as Code, a visual Agent Console, serverless isolated agent infrastructure, native chat UI, API endpoints, observability, auditability and an Agent Store. That makes it relevant for teams that want to move from an internal agent idea to a deployable workflow without spending months wiring custom infrastructure, UIs and governance. The Show HN launch on 2026-06-07 framed it as serverless infrastructure for running AI agents in isolated VMs, which makes the product timely for builders looking for safer agent execution, faster prototyping and repeatable deployment paths.

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AIMX
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AIMX is a self-hosted email server designed specifically for AI agents that need to send, receive, and reason over mail without depending on a user’s personal inbox. It provides an agent-oriented SMTP/mail exchange layer so developers can give assistants controlled email identities for workflows such as support triage, notifications, task intake, or automated correspondence. The product is for agent builders and technical teams that need email as infrastructure rather than a consumer app integration. It solves a practical gap: agents often need mail capabilities, but normal inbox access is too broad, brittle, or hard to audit. AIMX is notable after its Show HN launch because agent communication tools are becoming first-class infrastructure pieces.

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Perseus Vault
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Perseus Vault, formerly surfaced as Mimir, is a local-first MCP memory server for AI agents packaged as a single Rust binary. It gives agents durable memory across sessions using SQLite, full-text search, vector search, encryption, and dozens of MCP tools without requiring Docker, Postgres, or a hosted backend. Developers can use it with MCP-capable assistants and frameworks such as LangGraph, CrewAI, and AutoGen to preserve notes, facts, and long-running context while keeping the storage file under local control. The project is especially useful for privacy-conscious builders who want persistent agent memory but do not want a cloud account or heavyweight database stack. It appeared in current Show HN LLM/agent searches and was verified against the official Perseus Computing GitHub README.

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Volrix
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Volrix is an MCP-enabled finance research and backtesting tool that connects AI agents such as Claude and ChatGPT to workflows for index and commodity derivatives research. The launch evidence describes an MCP server that lets users run backtests and strategy research through natural language, which makes it a specialized bridge between agent interfaces and quantitative finance tasks. It is most relevant for traders, analysts and technically confident finance teams who want to test ideas faster without building every data/research workflow manually. Volrix came from today’s X launch leads and was selected only after its official homepage resolved successfully at volrix.ai.

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Agent Arena
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Agent Arena is an AI agent and model leaderboard platform for comparing how coding agents, autonomous builders, and frontier models perform on practical tasks. It helps builders track rankings, benchmark new releases, and understand which agents are improving across real-world workflows rather than relying only on marketing claims. The platform is useful for developers choosing a coding agent, AI teams monitoring competitive performance, and tool buyers who want a quick signal before testing a model in their own stack. Agent Arena stands out by focusing on agentic execution and builder-relevant comparisons, making it more actionable for software teams than broad chatbot leaderboards. It can also surface early movement around new model launches, access changes, and performance caveats.

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ScholarAIO
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ScholarAIO is a research infrastructure toolkit that gives AI agents a structured workspace for scientific and academic work. Instead of only asking a coding agent to browse papers ad hoc, it helps connect a reusable paper library, literature search, documentation lookup, scientific software guidance and reproducible research routines into one agent-friendly environment. The project is aimed at researchers, graduate students, scientific developers and technical teams that want AI assistants to reason with papers and domain tools more reliably. Its official repository describes it as Scholar All-In-One for AI agents, with Claude Code skills and active documentation. ScholarAIO is timely because more research workflows now involve coding agents, but those agents still need grounded literature context and better guardrails around scientific tools.

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Clarm
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Clarm is an AI inbound conversion platform that captures visitor questions across websites, Discord, Slack, and GitHub, then qualifies buyer intent and routes revenue opportunities automatically. Instead of treating inbound as a support-only problem, it aims to convert conversations from both humans and AI agents into faster responses, better qualification, and clearer pipeline generation. The product highlights instant response times, support deflection, and the ability to identify high-intent buyers without adding headcount, making it especially useful for technical B2B companies with active communities and documentation-heavy products. Clarm also positions itself as relevant for machine visitors doing product research, which is increasingly important in an agentic web. For teams balancing support, community engagement, and demand capture, it acts as a 24/7 AI layer for inbound revenue operations.

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Akmon
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Akmon is an open-source verification layer for AI agents that turns agent sessions into tamper-evident, signed evidence records. It works with agents or tools that emit OpenTelemetry and produces portable, content-addressed artifacts that a third party can verify offline using standard OpenSSL commands, without trusting the original machine or installing Akmon. That matters for teams experimenting with autonomous coding, operations or compliance agents because it gives reviewers a way to prove what an agent actually did after the fact. The Show HN launch emphasized offline verification, while the repository and documentation show a concrete developer workflow for audit trails, cryptographic signatures and reproducible agent-session evidence.

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StateSpace
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StateSpace is a search engine for the agentic web, focused on discovering llms.txt-enabled sites and resources that AI agents can understand and use. The homepage advertises a web search interface plus a CLI, SDK, and MCP server on GitHub, so it is aimed at developers, AI builders, and agent workflow designers who need structured discovery rather than another general web search box. It solves a growing problem: as more websites publish machine-readable context for LLMs, builders need a way to find, query, and integrate those sources into tools. The Show HN launch framed it specifically as a search engine for llms.txt sites, and the official page backs that with product links to GitHub, Discord, npm, and X.

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CloudPostOffice
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CloudPostOffice is a lightweight messaging service for connecting AI agents, scripts, apps, and devices without setting up MQTT, Redis, queues, or a broker. It supports simple send-and-receive patterns from Python, Node.js, and Go, so developers can create a postbox, send JSON messages, and have another process or agent receive them with a few lines of code. That makes it useful for prototypes, small automations, multi-agent experiments, IoT-style notifications, and background jobs that need realtime coordination but not a full infrastructure stack. The official page describes it as a super-simple messaging platform for AI agents, apps, and tools, and the HN launch positioned it as agent messaging in four lines.

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Ogcode
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Ogcode is an agentic coding assistant with a web UI, written in Go, that can understand a codebase, plan work with the user, create branches and open pull requests. Its Build Mode lets an agent read, edit and execute code directly, while Plan Mode decomposes larger features or refactors into branch-based tasks that can run in parallel. The tool is for developers who want a more visual, collaborative alternative to terminal-only coding agents. It solves the workflow gap between planning and implementation by keeping tasks, branches and PR creation in one loop. It is notable now because parallel branch agents are becoming a serious way to ship multi-part features faster.

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Supafax
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Supafax is an email-native AI agent that treats your inbox and outbox as the operating surface for personal automation. Instead of asking users to move routines, reminders, and relationship context into a separate dashboard, Supafax lets people email themselves to talk to the agent and uses email threads as memory, configuration, and task history. That makes it interesting for founders, operators, salespeople, and busy professionals who already run their day from email but want agentic follow-through without another workspace to maintain. It surfaced today through Show HN as a new agent experiment with a concrete workflow: storing rules, reminders, and context in a familiar append-only system. The product is early, but the homepage and HN launch make the identity clear enough for Smartoolbox discovery.

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Boxes.dev
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Boxes.dev provides cloud dev environments purpose-built for agentic coding workflows. Each Claude Code or Codex chat session runs on its own isolated cloud computer, letting developers connect from mobile and desktop without local resource constraints. The platform targets engineers who use AI coding agents extensively and hit rate limits or machine-switching friction — spin up a dedicated box, run your agent, and access it from anywhere. Launched on Show HN on June 4, 2026 with 103 points, Boxes.dev addresses a real pain point for the growing population of agentic-coding power users who need persistent, accessible, and isolated environments. The product is live and accepting users with a clean web console.

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Fabrica
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Fabrica is a terminal-based coding agent written in Rust with an interactive TUI, streaming conversation log, in-app model picker, and autonomous file and shell tools. The official README lists multi-provider support for Gemini, Claude, and OpenAI models, plus an agentic loop that can plan and execute multi-step tasks using tool calls until the job is done. It is useful for developers who want a lightweight, hackable coding-agent client outside a full IDE, especially when comparing providers or working in terminal-first environments. Fabrica is notable now because the coding-agent ecosystem is diversifying beyond proprietary editors, and many users want local, transparent tools that can be installed from source or crates.io.

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Slashspace
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Slashspace is a canvas-first agentic harness designed for power AI users who want to replace fragmented tool UIs with a single, unified interface for the AI era. Originally started as RabbitHoles AI, it evolved into a canvas-as-context platform with agentic nodes — visual building blocks that represent AI capabilities, data sources, and workflow steps. Slashspace integrates the Cursor AI SDK and Composio tools, enabling users to build complex agent workflows on a visual canvas rather than writing code or chaining prompts. Featured in X Social posts in June 2026, it targets developers, designers, and knowledge workers who want to orchestrate multiple AI tools and agents in a single visual workspace. After an 18-month bootstrap build, Slashspace represents a new paradigm where the canvas becomes the context for AI collaboration.

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MedAgent
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MedAgent is an open-source autonomous AI agent that handles medical appointment booking through WhatsApp in natural Spanish. The agent calls clinics, logs into insurance portals, finds covered doctors, checks calendar availability, and books appointments — all without human intervention. Built for the Spanish healthcare system, MedAgent combines ElevenLabs for voice synthesis, Claude for reasoning, Twilio for telephony, and Google Calendar for scheduling. It is aimed at patients, healthcare administrators, and developers building healthcare automation tools who want to eliminate the friction of phone-based appointment booking. The project launched on X with 21+ likes and provides a complete GitHub repository with working code. What makes MedAgent notable is the end-to-end autonomous healthcare workflow: it navigates real-world complexity — insurance verification, language nuance, calendar coordination — that most AI agents avoid, making it a practical demonstration of agent capabilities in a regulated domain.

Apple Extensions Platform lets third-party AI providers operate natively on iPhone, enabling apps like Claude to integrate directly into the iOS experience. Announced at WWDC 2026, this platform opens up system-level AI extensibility so users can invoke external AI assistants from within Safari, Messages, and other first-party apps. Developers can register their AI services as extensions, giving them access to on-device context while maintaining privacy boundaries. It marks Apple's shift from a closed AI ecosystem to one that embraces multi-model interoperability. For AI builders, this creates a new distribution surface on billions of active devices.

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Pacific Slate
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Pacific Slate is a self-hosted, model-agnostic personal AI system that packages a multi-agent assistant architecture for people who want control over their own AI workspace. The official site presents it as a personal system rather than a generic demo, with design notes around self-hosting and avoiding lock-in to a single model provider. It is useful for technical users, builders, and privacy-minded operators who want to run a configurable AI assistant stack on their own terms. The Show HN launch made it timely because personal agent platforms are shifting from hosted chat products toward composable local systems. Pacific Slate fits Smartoolbox as an AI-agent productivity tool for users who want an inspectable architecture and the flexibility to swap models instead of buying into one closed ecosystem.

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OpenOSINT
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OpenOSINT is an open-source AI agent for authorized open-source intelligence research with an interactive REPL, direct CLI, MCP server, and web UI. It is built for security researchers, investigators, red teams, and analysts who need structured OSINT workflows using Claude or local Ollama models. The repository documents a toolset for domains, emails, IPs, web data, search workflows, and report-style agent interactions, while repeatedly emphasizing legal and authorized use. Its MCP support makes it useful beyond a standalone terminal app: other agent clients can call OSINT capabilities as tools. With strong early GitHub traction and packaged releases, it qualifies as a usable developer/security tool rather than a thin demo.

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OpenRouter
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OpenRouter is a unified API platform that gives developers access to many leading AI models through one endpoint, making it easier to compare providers, manage fallbacks, and route traffic without rebuilding integrations each time. Teams can use it to prototype faster, optimize model cost and quality, and keep application logic more portable across model vendors. It is especially useful for startups, AI product teams, developers, and experiment-heavy builders who want flexibility when working with multiple frontier and open models. What makes OpenRouter stand out is its model marketplace approach combined with practical routing and compatibility features, letting users treat model access as an interchangeable layer instead of getting locked into one provider from the start.

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LiteHarness
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LiteHarness is an open-source SDK from LiteLLM Labs that gives developers one unified interface for running agent harnesses such as OpenCode, Claude Code and Codex. It follows the Claude Agent SDK message format, supports TypeScript and Python interfaces, and lets builders switch harnesses and models without rewriting orchestration code. LiteHarness is aimed at engineers building agentic developer tools, internal automation, or experimentation platforms where the agent backend may change over time. The project is still in preview, but it has clear setup instructions, active commits, and a concrete workflow problem: the AI coding ecosystem is fragmenting across many agent runtimes. LiteHarness is notable because it treats those runtimes as interchangeable backends behind one API, which can reduce lock-in for agent builders.

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ZeroQuarry
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ZeroQuarry is an adversarial AI security platform that searches for vulnerabilities across source code, binaries, and live cloud assets. Its multi-agent loop analyzes attack surfaces, debates findings, filters noise, generates pentester-grade reports, and can draft patches for issues it discovers. The tool is aimed at security engineers, open-source maintainers, DevSecOps teams, and startups that want deeper vulnerability discovery than a static scanner but do not always have a full red-team budget. ZeroQuarry is timely because AI coding and dependency-heavy development increase the need for continuous offensive testing. Its Show HN launch emphasized free scanning for open-source projects, while the official page presents a polished platform with pricing, reports, source scanning, binary analysis, and live asset coverage.

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Kagi Session2API MCP
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Kagi Session2API MCP is an open-source MCP server that lets AI assistants access Kagi Search and Summarizer through existing session tokens rather than a separate API key. It is aimed at Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, Hermes, and other MCP-client users who want high-quality web search available directly inside agent workflows. The project is useful for research assistants, coding agents, and personal automation setups where search and summarization need to be called as tools. Its appeal is pragmatic: it bridges a paid search product into the model-context ecosystem with local configuration and no heavyweight platform. It is notable now because recent GitHub MCP searches showed strong early interest and stars for a very specific agent-tooling gap.

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MetaBrain
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MetaBrain is an open-source local document memory for AI agents, AI tools, and humans. It gives agents a durable place to store and retrieve notes, source snippets, task context, metadata, tags, links, and version history instead of scattering state across loose Markdown, JSON, and scratch files. The project targets developers who use coding agents and need private, searchable memory that stays on their own machine across sessions. It is also useful for researchers and operators who want structured local knowledge without a cloud database. MetaBrain is notable now because memory is becoming a core missing layer for autonomous agents: tools can write code or answer questions, but they still need persistent project context to avoid repeating mistakes and losing continuity.

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Genspark AI
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Genspark AI is an agentic knowledge-work platform that uses many models to research, synthesize, and complete complex tasks for users. It helps people move beyond single-turn answers by coordinating searches, reasoning, document creation, and task-specific outputs across a broader model strategy. Knowledge workers, researchers, students, analysts, marketers, and founders can use Genspark AI for reports, comparisons, planning, and productivity workflows that require more than one model response. The platform is strongest when a user wants an AI system to assemble useful artifacts from multiple sources. What makes Genspark AI distinctive is its multi-model operating style, positioning model diversity as a feature for better task completion rather than relying on one flagship assistant.

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OpenLoom
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OpenLoom turns Loom links into transcripts and frames that an LLM can actually inspect. It is built for developers, researchers, support teams, product managers and AI-agent builders who receive useful context in screen recordings but need searchable text and visual frames rather than a passive video URL. The tool can make bug reports, walkthroughs, customer demos and design reviews easier to feed into coding agents or research assistants. That is useful because videos often contain the missing state that written tickets omit. OpenLoom is notable now because it launched on Show HN as a focused bridge between async video communication and LLM workflows. Its official homepage was reachable, product-specific, and sufficiently clear for a truthful Smartoolbox listing.

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Guide Labs Clarity
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Guide Labs Clarity is an interpretability platform for inspecting and steering AI model behavior through human-readable concepts. It helps researchers, AI safety teams, and model builders understand which concepts a model is using and adjust behavior more deliberately. The platform is associated with Clairy and Steerling 8B, giving users tools to explore, test, and influence internal model representations rather than relying only on black-box prompting. Clarity is useful for teams working on safer assistants, controllable model behavior, evaluation workflows, and research into how neural networks reason. Its distinctive value is making model steering more transparent by connecting practical tooling with concept-level interpretability.

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llmaker
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llmaker is an open-source platform for self-hosting a modern LLM application stack from one command. Its README describes provisioning large language models, vector databases, embeddings, caching, observability, retrieval, and an agent layer on private infrastructure without third-party API keys or data leaving the machine. The tool is aimed at developers, platform engineers, privacy-sensitive startups, and teams that want to build private RAG chatbots, FAQ assistants, and recommendation systems without assembling every component by hand. llmaker is especially relevant now because more organizations want local or self-managed AI infrastructure rather than only hosted SaaS model access. Its fresh Show HN appearance and GitHub metadata verify an active, installable project with concrete docs.

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Codex CLI
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Codex CLI is OpenAI’s terminal-based coding agent that helps developers read, edit, run, and iterate on code directly from the command line. Instead of limiting AI assistance to a browser chat or IDE sidebar, it brings coding workflows into a local terminal environment where users can work faster on implementation, debugging, and multi-step software tasks. The tool is especially useful for developers who prefer command-line workflows, operate across repositories, or want an agent that can act on code in context rather than only suggest snippets. Codex CLI stands out by combining OpenAI’s coding system with a practical local execution model that fits real development habits. For engineers evaluating AI coding assistants beyond autocomplete, Codex CLI is a meaningful addition to the fast-growing category of agentic developer tools.

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Kitaru
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Kitaru is an open-source runtime for recording, replaying, and improving autonomous AI-agent runs in production. Built by the ZenML team, it sits under whatever harness a team already uses and captures model calls, tool calls, checkpoints, decisions, artifacts, and versioned deployments so failures can be diagnosed instead of guessed at. Developers can replay an agent run with different inputs or models, fork from checkpoints, resume long-running flows, and keep a durable execution record on their own infrastructure. It is especially useful for teams moving from prototype agents to production systems where observability, regression testing, and controlled updates matter. The fresh Show HN launch and official GitHub/docs pages make it a timely agent-infrastructure listing for Smartoolbox.

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PeekAI
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PeekAI is a local-first observability and debugging library for Python AI agents. Developers add one initialization call and get visibility into LLM calls, tool use, traces, and token spend without sending data to a cloud dashboard or creating another vendor account. The workflow is aimed at solo builders, internal-agent teams, and privacy-sensitive prototypes where LangSmith-style observability is useful but external telemetry is not acceptable. The project stores traces locally, uses SQLite, ships on PyPI, and is explicitly positioned for lightweight agent debugging. PeekAI is notable now because it launched on Show HN as a small, focused alternative to hosted tracing tools, with an official GitHub repo and package page verifying that it is installable today.

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Superhighway
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Superhighway is a web-search API designed specifically for AI agents, solving the problem of how agents pay for and access web information autonomously. Using the x402 payment protocol and MCP (Model Context Protocol), Superhighway lets AI agents pay for search results per call in USDC — no signup, no API key, no human in the loop. This enables truly autonomous research agents that can find and pay for information on their own, without requiring a human to manage API keys or billing. Launched on Show HN on June 9, 2026, Superhighway addresses a critical gap in the agent ecosystem: as agents become more autonomous, they need economic capabilities to access paid APIs independently. The product is live and represents a new model for agent-tool interaction where agents have their own spending authority.

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Famulor
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Famulor is an omnichannel AI assistant platform for phone, WhatsApp, live voice, and chat, built to automate customer communication with fast, human-like responses. The product focuses heavily on AI telephony, offering low-latency voice interactions, multilingual conversations, business tool integrations, analytics, a visual flow builder, and enterprise features like SIP connectivity and EU-hosted GDPR-compliant infrastructure. Famulor is aimed at companies that want AI agents to handle inbound calls, outbound campaigns, support questions, and lead qualification across multiple channels without forcing customers into a text-only experience. Its positioning is stronger than a basic chatbot because it connects voice, messaging, automation, and operational analytics in one system. For sales, service, and operations teams, Famulor looks like a practical voice-first AI operations layer.

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Dirge
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Dirge is a Rust-based coding agent harness designed to make budget AI models perform more reliably on software-development tasks. It provides structure around intent resolution, grounding, error correction, session continuity, and memory management so smaller models can work through coding problems with fewer failures. The tool is aimed at developers, AI experimenters, and teams exploring cost-efficient coding automation without relying exclusively on premium frontier models. Dirge stands out because it focuses on orchestration and recovery around the model, not just model selection. That makes it useful for testing how much performance can be gained from a smarter harness, better context handling, and repeatable agent workflows.

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AA-Briefcase
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AA-Briefcase is an Artificial Analysis benchmark for measuring long-horizon agentic knowledge work. It evaluates how AI systems handle complex projects that require planning, research, synthesis, and sustained execution across realistic professional tasks. The benchmark is useful for model developers, AI product teams, researchers, and buyers who need stronger evidence than short prompts or generic leaderboards. What makes AA-Briefcase notable is its focus on expert-built project work, where agents must maintain context and produce practical outputs over time. It gives teams a clearer way to compare whether models and agent platforms can perform meaningful knowledge work rather than only isolated reasoning tests.

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Caliper
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Caliper is a local-first evaluation harness for testing Claude Code, Codex and Pi skills with repeatable pass@k measurements. It lets builders define tasks, run a skill multiple times, compare the result with and without the skill, and track whether prompt or workflow edits actually improve reliability. The README positions it around questions agent-skill authors face every week: did a change help, does the skill beat the base agent, and does it still pass after model updates? Caliper is useful for developers building agent skills, internal automations, or reusable AI workflows who need evidence instead of vibes. It is timely because skills are spreading across coding agents, but most teams still lack lightweight test harnesses for them.

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Lovable Dev
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Discover Lovable Dev, the cutting-edge AI tool for web development and prototyping. With live rendering, instant undo, bug fixing capabilities, and collaborative branching, it transforms how software is built. This revolutionary app builder offers seamless integration with Supabase and Github, allowing for swift one-click deployment. Lovable Dev streamlines the design-to-development process, making it effortless to iterate and customize projects with powerful AI-generated code. Revolutionize your development workflow with Lovable Devs intuitive interface and unmatched efficiency.

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Flowexec Flow
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Flowexec Flow is an open-source workflow automation tool designed to follow developers across projects from the command line. The official repository links to flowexec.io and positions Flow as a project-aware automation layer rather than a single-purpose script runner. It is useful for developers, platform teams, and AI-assisted builders who want repeatable workflows, release tasks, checks, or local automations that can move with a codebase. The Show HN launch framed it as workflow automation that follows you across projects, which fits the growing need for agent-friendly project operations. Flowexec Flow is notable now because coding agents increasingly need reliable commands and reusable workflows around repositories, not just ad hoc shell actions generated in chat.

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CodeSeek
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CodeSeek is a Rust-powered code intelligence CLI that gives AI coding agents structured access to a repository through call graphs, symbol search, hybrid semantic search, and native MCP tools. It is built for developers using Claude Code, Codex CLI, or similar terminal agents who need better codebase navigation than plain grep or repeated file dumping. After indexing a project, CodeSeek can answer callers/callees questions, search symbols, provide semantic context, and install itself as agent-facing tooling. That makes it useful for large repositories where agent context windows and brittle file discovery slow down work. It is notable now because it is a recent GitHub MCP/coding project with strong early stars, npm install instructions, and explicit support for Claude Code and Codex workflows.

Siri with Apple Intelligence is Apple’s AI assistant layer for iPhone, iPad, Mac, and the wider Apple ecosystem. It brings private, context-aware assistance to everyday tasks such as writing, summarizing, image creation, app actions, and conversational help while leaning on on-device processing and Apple’s privacy architecture. Consumers, creators, students, and professionals who already live inside Apple devices can use it to make routine interactions faster without switching to a separate AI workspace. Its unique advantage is distribution: the assistant is built directly into the operating system and native apps, so AI features can appear where users already work.

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AgentRQ
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AgentRQ is a human-in-the-loop task-management platform for AI agents, built around workspaces, scheduled tasks, real-time updates, and Model Context Protocol servers. It lets a supervisor agent inspect workspaces, create tasks, assign work, and report back, while human operators keep visibility into the task queue and agent activity. The open-source stack includes a Go backend, Vue frontend, SQLite persistence, Google OAuth, SSE notifications, and MCP endpoints designed for Claude Code, Gemini CLI, and similar coding agents. AgentRQ is useful for builders experimenting with persistent agent work rather than one-off chat sessions. Its Show HN release is notable because it packages a production-inspired agent operating loop into a reusable app.

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OpenDream
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OpenDream is a local-first memory layer for AI agents that helps useful context survive across sessions, tools and projects. It captures what happened, retrieves relevant memories later, and supports review of what changed so agents do not repeat the same discovery work every time they restart. The official repository and homepage position it as open, source-aware agent context rather than a generic notes app, with Python packaging and an Apache-2.0 license. It is useful for developers building coding agents, research assistants or long-running personal automations that need durable memory without sending every detail to a hosted service. OpenDream is timely because agent workflows are becoming longer-lived, and memory quality is now one of the biggest practical limits on autonomous AI usefulness.

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Burrow
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Burrow is an open-source native macOS app that wraps the Mole CLI in a cleaner interface for maintenance, app cleanup, disk mapping, safe optimization and live system status. Its AI relevance comes from the built-in MCP server: Claude Code and other MCP-compatible agents can ask what has been happening on the Mac and use Burrow’s local SQLite metrics history as context. That makes it a practical bridge between local system maintenance and agent-assisted debugging or operations. The project is positioned as a free, independent alternative inspired by mole.fit, ships with screenshots and installation instructions, and emerged in recent GitHub MCP searches with enough adoption to qualify as a usable Smartoolbox developer/productivity listing.

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fenic
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fenic is an open-source DataFrame framework from typedef.ai for building AI and agentic applications around structured and unstructured data. Instead of treating LLM calls as side effects glued around a pipeline, fenic puts semantic operators such as extract, classify, summarize, embed, and semantic join directly into a familiar DataFrame query model. Developers can use it to process documents, transcripts, logs, eval traces, tickets, tables, and APIs into reusable, inspectable pipelines. That makes it valuable for RAG builders, data engineers, AI application teams, and agent developers who need repeatable workflows rather than one-off prompts. It appeared in fresh Show HN results and was verified through its official GitHub README, docs, PyPI metadata, and typedef.ai homepage references.

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Daytona
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Daytona provides secure, API-accessible development environments for AI agents and engineering teams that need isolated computers on demand. Teams can spin up sandboxes for coding agents, run tools inside controlled workspaces, and keep risky automation away from local machines or production systems. It is useful for agent builders, developer tooling teams, and companies experimenting with computer-use workflows. Daytona stands out because it treats the agent runtime as infrastructure: reproducible, sandboxed, and programmable instead of an ad hoc browser or developer laptop session. This makes it practical for teams that want stronger security boundaries, faster experiments, and predictable environments for autonomous software work.

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API Ingest
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API Ingest is an MCP server, web UI, and CLI that converts API specifications into token-efficient, LLM-friendly documentation for coding agents. It supports formats such as OpenAPI, RAML, WSDL, GraphQL, and API Blueprint, then chunks endpoints with auth details, parameters, schemas, and curl examples so agents can retrieve exactly the API surface they need. The tool is useful for developers using Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, or other agents that often hallucinate endpoints after scraping documentation pages. API Ingest is notable because it solves a concrete reliability problem in agentic software development: turning messy API docs into deterministic context instead of asking models to browse and guess.

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JobLeads LLM
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JobLeads LLM is an AI-powered job search assistant aimed at helping people find better-fit roles faster and present themselves more effectively to employers. Instead of acting as a generic chatbot, it sits inside the job-hunting workflow by supporting search, role matching, and resume improvement in one experience. That makes it useful for professionals who want to reduce the time spent filtering listings, rewriting applications, and figuring out which opportunities are actually worth pursuing. The value is less about novelty and more about compressing a messy process into a guided system that keeps momentum high. For job seekers who want practical AI support around discovery and application quality, JobLeads LLM offers a focused productivity layer on top of a traditionally manual search process.

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Agent Historian
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Agent Historian is a command-line utility and agent skill that lets AI coding agents search their own past conversation history before repeating the same research or debugging. It reads local stores such as OpenCode and Claude Code history, supports project-scoped or global searches, and outputs plain, context-friendly results that an agent can page, grep, or pipe into another command. The target user is a developer or AI-workflow operator who frequently restarts agents and loses hard-won context about commands, errors, and decisions. It is notable now because it launched on Show HN as a concrete solution to agent statelessness, with an npm package, documented CLI, and read-only design that makes adoption low risk.

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Skill Extractor
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Skill Extractor is an open-source tool that mines reusable coding-agent skills from Claude Code, Codex CLI, or other agent transcripts. Instead of relying on opaque memory, it reads local traces, redacts secrets, scores candidate lessons by confidence and utility, weights them by whether the originating run succeeded, and puts each proposed skill into a review queue before anything becomes persistent instruction. Developers can approve, edit, or reject suggestions from a VS Code panel, a Claude Code slash command, or the raw CLI, with approved output written as normal SKILL.md files. It is useful for solo developers and teams that repeatedly teach agents the same project habits. The official Apache-2.0 GitHub repository verifies docs, hooks, examples, security notes, and a July 2026 release.

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consult-llm
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consult-llm is a developer tool for asking another AI model for a second opinion from inside an existing agent workflow. It can help plan architecture, review changes, debate implementation options, or unblock tricky bugs by routing context to a different model instead of letting one model judge its own work. The project supports OpenRouter models, major frontier models, API and local CLI backends, multi-turn threads, git diff context, clipboard-based web mode, and a live monitor TUI. It is notable now because serious agentic coding increasingly needs cross-model verification, and consult-llm gives developers a lightweight command-line pattern for model diversity without adopting a full orchestration platform.

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Thaw
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Thaw is the fork primitive for AI agents — think 'git branch' for running LLM sessions. When an agent needs to explore multiple hypotheses in parallel, Thaw snapshots the entire running state (weights, KV cache, scheduler state, prefix-hash table) and hydrates N divergent children at the fork point, skipping expensive cold prefill. Benchmarks show 400x amortized speedup on H100 hardware with Llama-3.1-8B, bringing fork round latency from 340 seconds cold-boot down to sub-second. Use cases include agent branching for parallel reasoning, RL rollouts, and tree-of-thought search. Installable via pip as thaw-vllm, it's Apache 2.0 licensed with comprehensive benchmarks and reproducible demos.

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OpenDocsWork MCP
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OpenDocsWork MCP is a Rust-native Model Context Protocol server that enables AI assistants to read, write, and process Microsoft Office documents including Excel spreadsheets, Word documents, and PowerPoint presentations. It exposes structured tool calls that MCP-compatible hosts like Claude, Cursor, and other AI clients can invoke to create reports, fill templates, extract data from spreadsheets, and generate presentations without manual copy-paste workflows. The server runs locally with sub-millisecond response times, keeping sensitive documents on-device. It targets developers building document-heavy automation, enterprise teams processing reports, and anyone who needs AI agents to interact with Office formats natively. With 102 GitHub stars, GPL-3.0 licensing, and active development, OpenDocsWork MCP fills a practical gap in the MCP ecosystem where most servers focus on web APIs rather than desktop document formats.

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FinSight AI
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FinSight AI is an open-source equity research agent for turning filings, financial reports, research notes, market data, and company events into source-grounded answers and versioned research reports. The project is intentionally infrastructure-heavy: it demonstrates resilient workflows, Redis Lua single-flight controls, pgvector-backed RAG, evidence tracing, report caching, and RAG evaluation rather than only a thin model wrapper. It is useful for developers, quant-minded analysts, fintech builders, and AI engineers who want a reference implementation for reliable financial research workflows. The repository surfaced in fresh GitHub AI-agent searches with substantial traction, and the official README verifies a runnable institutional research console plus backend patterns for evidence-grounded reports and agent orchestration.

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Plaid
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Plaid is a financial data connectivity platform that lets apps securely link bank accounts, transactions, balances, identity data, and payment information. AI products can use Plaid to power personalized finance assistants, cash-flow analysis, budgeting guidance, underwriting workflows, and account-aware automation without building direct bank integrations from scratch. Fintech teams, personal finance apps, lenders, and AI builders working with consumer financial context can use Plaid as the data layer behind smarter financial experiences. The platform is strongest when a product needs reliable account connectivity, permissions, and compliance-friendly infrastructure. What makes Plaid stand out is its broad financial network and developer-ready APIs, which turn fragmented banking data into structured inputs that AI systems can reason over.

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Turbopuffer
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Turbopuffer is search and vector storage infrastructure built for large-scale AI retrieval workloads. It helps teams store embeddings, query high-volume indexes, and support retrieval-augmented generation systems without treating vector search as a fragile sidecar. Developers can use it for semantic search, recommendation systems, knowledge bases, and agent memory pipelines where latency and cost matter. Turbopuffer is especially relevant for infrastructure teams building AI products that need reliable retrieval over growing datasets rather than one-off prototype indexes. Teams adopting agents can use it as a foundation for durable context, fast lookups, and retrieval systems that keep improving as data grows. today.

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Markifact MCP
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Markifact MCP is an open-source universal marketing MCP server that lets AI clients manage advertising, analytics, commerce and communication platforms through a controlled tool interface. The official repository lists Google Ads, Meta Ads, TikTok Ads, LinkedIn Ads, Microsoft Ads, Reddit Ads, Pinterest Ads, Snapchat Ads, Amazon Ads, DV360, GA4, BigQuery, Search Console, Shopify, HubSpot, Klaviyo, WhatsApp, Slack and more, with 300-plus operations and human-in-the-loop checks. It is useful for marketers, agencies, growth engineers and automation builders who want AI assistants to operate marketing systems without handing them raw dashboard access. Markifact is notable now because MCP tools are spreading beyond developer workflows into business operations, and this project targets a clear high-value marketing automation surface.

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Centaur Loop
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Centaur Loop is an open-source workbench for teams that want AI agents to operate inside human-governed feedback loops. It frames agent work as accountable cycles: agents plan and execute, humans approve key gates, and real-world outcomes become reviewed memory for future runs. The project targets operators, product teams, and developers experimenting with agentic workflows but worried about unchecked autonomy, unclear responsibility, or unreviewed memory accumulation. Its Studio interface and bilingual documentation make it more concrete than a methodology-only repo. It is notable now because the project appeared as a fresh May 2026 GitHub launch with a live official website and a clear stance on human judgment in production agent systems.

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Search Router
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Search Router is an open-source reference application that provides retrieval-ready web search optimized for AI agents. It wraps web search into a structured format that AI coding agents and autonomous systems can consume directly, handling query parsing, result ranking, content extraction, and format normalization. The tool is aimed at developers building AI agents, RAG pipelines, and autonomous research systems who need reliable web search integration without managing raw search API complexity. Built as a reference implementation on top of the Serper search API, Search Router demonstrates best practices for connecting agents to real-time web information. It launched on Hacker News with 3 points and the GitHub repository includes clear documentation and setup instructions. What makes Search Router notable is its focus on the agent consumption pattern: rather than returning raw search results for humans, it structures output for machine reasoning, filling a practical infrastructure gap in the AI agent ecosystem.

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Synoppy
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Synoppy is a web-data API layer built for AI agents and LLM applications. It lets developers read, crawl, map, search, extract, classify and enrich websites through one key and one API, returning clean markdown, HTML, text or structured results that are easier for agents to consume. The homepage also advertises MCP support for plugging into Claude, Cursor and ChatGPT, which makes it relevant for agent builders who need reliable live web context without maintaining separate scrapers and parsers. It is notable now because the X launch artifact captured a June 24 launch post, and the official homepage confirms a v1.0 product with free starter credits, docs, pricing and a clear developer workflow.

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Career-Ops
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Career-Ops is an open-source, AI-powered job search operating system built around Claude Code, OpenCode, Gemini CLI and a Go dashboard. It gives job seekers a structured workflow for researching companies, tailoring application materials, generating PDFs, tracking progress and running batch tasks instead of manually juggling spreadsheets and disconnected prompts. The project includes fourteen skill modes, browser automation with Playwright and multilingual documentation, making it useful for candidates who want repeatable leverage across many applications. It is notable now because it launched recently, has unusually strong GitHub traction for a new career tool, and packages agentic job-search work as a practical local system rather than another resume-template SaaS.

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Kimi K2.6
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Kimi K2.6 is Moonshot’s multimodal AI model and assistant experience built for coding, long-context reasoning, and agent-style task execution. It supports extended context windows, strong software development performance, and interactive workflows that help users move from simple chat into more capable research and execution tasks. That makes it useful for developers, technical teams, and advanced users who want an AI system for debugging, implementation support, document analysis, and complex multi-step problem solving. Kimi K2.6 stands out through its combination of open-weight momentum, strong coding reputation, and a product surface that connects model capability with a usable assistant interface. For builders comparing next-generation AI tools beyond the usual US platforms, Kimi K2.6 is a serious option in the fast-moving agentic model landscape.

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Shotlist
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Shotlist is an open-source screenshot automation tool for documentation, agent runs, and reproducible UI proof. A project defines a committed “shot list” that can capture web pages, real terminal windows, and stateful CLI sessions, making screenshots repeatable rather than manually staged. The workflow is valuable for developer teams, technical writers, and AI-agent builders that need visual evidence for generated work, release notes, tutorials, or regression checks. It surfaced on Show HN as “make your AI agent prove its work with real screenshots,” which is a concrete fit for agent verification workflows. The official GitHub repository provides the source, docs context, and product description, so the repo path is the meaningful canonical URL rather than the shared github.com domain.

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Agentic Orchestrator
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Agentic Orchestrator is DoorDash’s open-source terminal workflow for supervising long-running AI coding agents. Instead of asking a model to directly edit files from a vague prompt, the local CLI, agentico, guides an engineering workflow through context gathering, inquiry, research, planning, decomposition, implementation, verification, review, and pull request creation. It is useful for developers and engineering teams who want to run multiple agentic implementation attempts in parallel while keeping checkpoints where human judgment still matters. The project is notable because it targets the operational failure mode of AI coding: fast plausible code without durable context, tests, or review. It appeared in Show HN as a TUI for long-running coding agents, and the official DoorDash OSS repository provides detailed setup and architecture documentation.

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ClawChat
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ClawChat is an end-to-end encrypted coordination platform designed specifically for multi-agent AI systems. It provides secure communication channels where multiple AI agents can exchange messages, share context, and coordinate tasks without exposing sensitive data to intermediaries. The platform is aimed at developers and organizations deploying fleets of AI agents that need to collaborate on complex workflows while maintaining data privacy and security guarantees. ClawChat launched on Show HN and addresses an emerging need: as AI agents become more autonomous and multi-agent architectures grow, teams need encrypted, auditable coordination infrastructure rather than relying on plaintext messaging or shared databases. For enterprises running agent-based automation where data sensitivity matters, ClawChat offers a privacy-first communication layer purpose-built for agent-to-agent interaction.

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Kikubot
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Kikubot is an open-source framework that turns email inboxes into autonomous AI agents. Each running agent polls an IMAP mailbox, processes new messages through an LLM-driven loop, uses a configurable tool set, and replies through SMTP. Multiple agents can collaborate by emailing each other, using normal email threads as durable asynchronous context. This is useful for teams that want AI assistants to participate in existing workflows without installing a new chat platform or training users on another interface. It also gives builders a familiar identity and access-control model: accounts, addresses, threads and mail-server permissions. Kikubot’s Show HN launch and active GitHub repo make it a fresh example of agent orchestration built on boring, reliable infrastructure rather than a proprietary messaging surface.

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better-auth
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better-auth is an open-source authentication framework for building secure login, session, and user-management flows in modern applications. It gives developers a flexible auth layer with support for common authentication patterns, extensible APIs, and integration-friendly architecture for apps and AI-agent workflows. Teams can use it to avoid rebuilding identity plumbing, standardize sign-in behavior, and move faster while keeping control over their stack. It is especially useful for product engineers, indie hackers, and startups that want developer-first authentication without being locked into a heavy hosted platform. Its open-source model and recent Vercel backing make it a strong fit for fast-moving web projects that need credible, customizable auth infrastructure.

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Inbox Wars
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Inbox Wars is an agentic A/B testing simulator for marketing email. Instead of splitting a real subscriber list and risking revenue on a weak variant, marketers can test two candidate emails against a simulated inbox populated with competitor messages and a fleet of 100 LLM persona agents. Each agent has attention, click, and purchase constraints, producing estimated open rate, click rate, and simulated revenue before a campaign is sent. The product is aimed at e-commerce marketers, growth teams, copywriters, and agencies that want directional feedback faster than live testing. It is notable because it uses agents as market-research simulators, turning qualitative customer personas into a structured pre-send decision workflow.

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ego lite
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ego lite is a purpose-built browser for running AI agents alongside human users in parallel. Each agent gets its own isolated Space with independent tabs, sessions, and login state, so multiple AI coding or research tasks can execute simultaneously without interference. The product targets developers and power users who run Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, or similar agentic tools and need autonomous browser-based workflows without managing separate windows or containers. ego lite solves the growing problem of agent concurrency: as teams delegate more tasks to AI agents, those agents need real browser environments that do not collide with each other or with human work. Built by Citro Labs under an MIT license, the project has 46 GitHub stars and active development through June 2026. Its launch post on X received 36 likes with demo videos showing parallel agent execution.

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DeepCloak
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DeepCloak is a local-first deep research agent for reading difficult web pages and producing cited reports. The project focuses on pages protected by anti-bot layers such as Cloudflare, Datadome, Turnstile, and reCAPTCHA, with MCP-native integration so AI agents can call it as a research tool. It is aimed at developers, analysts, and agent builders who need a self-hosted retrieval component for web research workflows where ordinary fetchers fail. The README includes a PyPI package, quickstart, live demo, multilingual docs, and agent integration notes, which makes it more usable than a thin scraper. It surfaced as a recent GitHub RAG candidate and fits Smartoolbox’s agent/developer audience.

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Beevibe AI CTO
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Beevibe AI CTO is an architecture deep-research tool for engineering teams that want better decisions before coding agents generate code. It focuses on strategic system design, architecture decision records, pull-request review, and drift detection, giving AI-assisted teams a repeatable decision layer rather than another autocomplete surface. The official repository describes commands such as adr decide for live deep-research debates, suggesting a workflow where agents and humans can evaluate tradeoffs before implementation. It is notable now because agentic coding is moving from single prompts to coordinated engineering processes, and architecture quality is a common failure point. For Smartoolbox users, Beevibe AI CTO fits as a developer productivity and code-assistant companion for teams adopting AI coding agents seriously.

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Agent FM
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Agent FM is a macOS companion that turns Claude Code and Codex sessions into an ambient radio feed. Instead of watching several terminals, developers can listen to a global mix across active agents or tune into one session for detailed progress, blockers, decisions, errors and attention requests. The app runs locally, uses your own Gemini or OpenAI keys, and adds a menu-bar remote for controlling broadcasts in the background. It is useful for builders running multiple coding agents in parallel who want situational awareness without reading every transcript. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and already provides a signed macOS download plus a public demo.

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A2A
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A2A, or Agent2Agent Protocol, is an open interoperability standard that enables AI agents to communicate, delegate work, and collaborate across different systems and vendors. Rather than treating every integration like a custom tool call, A2A gives agents a structured way to discover capabilities, exchange tasks, and coordinate outcomes in more agent-native workflows. It is especially relevant for developers, platform teams, and enterprises building multi-agent products, business automations, or orchestration layers that need agents to work together cleanly. What makes A2A unique is its direct focus on agent-to-agent communication as a first-class problem, complementing tool protocols and helping move the industry toward more modular, connected, and production-ready agent ecosystems.

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Dikaletus
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Dikaletus is an open-source meeting agent for teams and individuals who want local control over meeting capture without adopting a heavyweight SaaS recorder. The Codeberg project records system audio with FFmpeg and PulseAudio, then uses the Mistral AI API to transcribe and summarize the session into usable notes. It is useful for developers, researchers, founders, and small teams that want scriptable meeting memory, auditable code, and the option to adapt the workflow to their own environment. The tool is notable now because lightweight AI meeting agents are moving beyond calendar-integrated bots into transparent command-line utilities that can be inspected, self-hosted, and wired into custom knowledge workflows.

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AnyCoder
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AnyCoder is an AI-powered full-stack coding agent that helps developers build, edit, and understand code through natural language interactions. The system provides a chat interface where users can describe desired functionality and receive generated code snippets, explanations, and modifications across multiple programming languages and frameworks. AnyCoder integrates with various AI models including Qwen, GLM, DeepSeek, and Kimi families to provide coding assistance. The platform features a split-interface design with backend APIs for code generation and frontend interfaces for user interaction, supporting tasks from code explanation to full application generation.

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PMB
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PMB (Personal Memory Brain) is a local-first persistent memory system for AI coding agents including Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex. It connects via MCP and delivers 94.5% recall@10 on the LoCoMo benchmark with just 70ms p50 warm recall latency. Supporting 50+ languages with zero API keys required, PMB stores all memory locally for complete privacy. It's designed for developers who need their AI agents to remember context, decisions, and project details across sessions without sending data to external services. Apache 2.0 licensed, it has already gained 61 GitHub stars and is available on PyPI as pmb-ai. A strong alternative to cloud-based memory solutions for privacy-conscious development teams.

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Facio
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Facio is an open-source proactive AI agent for secure, traceable, human-in-the-loop execution of long-running workflows. The GitHub project positions it as infrastructure for tasks that need more governance than a one-shot chatbot response: agents can execute work, preserve evidence, and keep humans involved when approvals or review are required. It is aimed at developers and teams experimenting with operational agents but worried about auditability, safety, and uncontrolled automation. Facio is useful when the job is not simply generating text or code, but coordinating a process over time with a visible trail. It surfaced in the GitHub recent AI-agent search with meaningful early traction, making it a qualified developer-tool listing for agent workflow builders.

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e2a
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e2a is an authenticated email gateway designed for AI agents that need to receive, verify and send email safely. It provides SPF and DKIM-verified inbound mail, HMAC-signed delivery headers, webhook and WebSocket fan-out, an outbound HTTP API, and TypeScript and Python SDKs. Teams can use the hosted service or self-host it, which makes it relevant for agent builders who need email as a real workflow input rather than a fragile inbox scrape. The product also includes a human-in-the-loop approval gate for outbound messages, helping prevent autonomous agents from sending unreviewed emails. It is notable now because it launched recently on Show HN with a clear hosted and open-source path.

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Frank
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Frank is an AI-powered customer research platform that automates deep user interviews at survey scale. Product teams can use it to run hundreds of adaptive interviews across voice, video, and chat without scheduling calls, managing transcripts, or manually synthesizing responses. Frank is built for discovery interviews, churn analysis, concept testing, usability research, and post-release feedback, helping companies uncover pain points, adoption blockers, and customer language far faster than traditional research workflows. Its promise is to compress weeks of qualitative research into just a few days while making large-scale interviewing dramatically more affordable. By turning thousands of customer conversations into actionable insights, Frank gives teams a practical way to validate what to build next, improve retention, and make product decisions using richer evidence than lightweight forms or static surveys can provide.

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SwarmWright
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SwarmWright is a self-hosted multi-agent AI platform for builders who want more structure than a folder of prompts, scripts, and improvised workflows. Agents are defined as markdown files, while a topology graph controls which agents may call each other, giving teams a clear boundary around autonomous behavior. The product is aimed at developers, operators, and small teams experimenting with agent pipelines that still need human-in-the-loop approvals and traceable execution. It solves the messy orchestration problem by packaging agent definitions, graph constraints, audit trails, and a simple Docker-based setup into one runtime. The fresh Show HN launch makes it notable now because multi-agent systems are moving from loose demos toward governed, inspectable infrastructure.

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Glide
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Glide is an AI tool that enables easy creation and deployment of custom apps without the need for coding. By simply adding a column to a table, users can harness AI capabilities to automate tasks like generating emails, product descriptions, and summaries effortlessly. Glide handles complex AI processes behind the scenes, removing the burden of managing models or APIs. It seamlessly converts JSON into code in various languages, making it versatile for different development needs. Glide works with Google Sheets, Excel, or Airtable to build apps and websites swiftly. Its user-friendly approach and streamlined automation set it apart, offering a convenient solution for app development. Start building your first app with Glide for free today!

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Decagon Duet
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Decagon Duet is an AI partner platform that helps customer experience teams build, optimize, and scale self-improving AI agents. Its Duet Autopilot feature analyzes real customer conversations to automatically generate Agent Operating Procedures (AOPs), identify gaps before they reach customers, and continuously iterate on agents based on production signals. Every update passes through automated simulation tests and is staged for human review with comprehensive health reports, ensuring enterprise governance. Customers include SimplePractice (85% deflection rate), ClassPass (95% cost reduction), Hunter Douglas ($1M revenue from AI-handled conversations), and Eight Sleep (100% of CX teams build with Duet). Launched on June 9, 2026 via X and covered by Business Wire and Yahoo Finance, Decagon Duet represents a new category of verified self-improving AI agents for CX.

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Craft Agents OSS
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Craft Agents OSS is an open-source desktop AI agent stack built around Electron, Anthropic Claude Agent SDK, MCP, Bun, WebSockets, OAuth, skills, and multi-model automation. It is for developers who want to inspect or extend a desktop-agent architecture rather than depend entirely on a closed assistant. The repository points toward a cross-platform agent client that can connect to model providers, invoke tools, run automations, and integrate with developer workflows. It is especially relevant for builders experimenting with local desktop AI, VS Code alternatives, headless servers, or MCP-enabled automation. It is notable now because recent GitHub MCP searches showed rapid interest, and desktop agent infrastructure is becoming a major category alongside chatbots and coding assistants.

Thinking Machines Interaction Models is a research-preview AI model experience for real-time human-AI collaboration across audio, video, and text. It focuses on micro-turn interactions, letting people and AI systems exchange short, fluid signals instead of waiting for long prompt-and-response cycles. Teams can use the work as inspiration for collaborative interfaces, multimodal assistants, shared creative tools, and agent workflows where timing and context matter as much as raw model capability. It is most relevant for AI product builders, researchers, interface designers, and developers exploring the next generation of interactive systems. What makes it stand out is the emphasis on coordination: the model concept treats AI as an active collaborator that can listen, respond, and adapt continuously across multiple communication modes.

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Weaviate
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Weaviate is an open-source vector database that combines vector search with structured data filtering, enabling hybrid search for AI applications. It offers modules for text2vec, multi2vec, and generative search, with cloud and self-hosted deployment options. Ideal for teams building knowledge bases, semantic search engines, and RAG pipelines that need both vector and keyword search in a single system.

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Anansi
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Anansi is an open-source self-healing web scraper designed for hostile or fast-changing sites. It repairs broken selectors, can switch into browser rendering when static scraping is not enough, and uses Chrome TLS fingerprinting techniques to behave more like a real browser. The project also ships an MCP server, which means LLM agents can drive crawling and extraction through conversation rather than custom glue code. Anansi is aimed at developers building research agents, data pipelines, competitive-intelligence tools, or retrieval systems that need resilient web access. It is notable now because agent workflows increasingly depend on live web data, but ordinary scraping breaks easily; Anansi packages repair, rendering, and agent-tool access into one practical developer repository.

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Margarita
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Margarita is a Markdown-like programming language for repeatable AI agent workflows. Instead of hiding execution inside an opaque chat harness, it lets builders declare variables, include reusable prompt components, call models, run local Python functions, manage context, and pass results between steps in readable .mg and .mgx scripts. Developers can use it for automated code review, email summaries, scheduled reports, GitHub issue triage, game loops, data enrichment, or custom agent loops that should run the same way more than once. It was discovered through a July 2 Show HN agent-language launch and verified on the official Margarita site plus GitHub link. It fits Smartoolbox as a developer tool for teams that want deterministic agent workflows without a heavy orchestration framework.

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Claude Code
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Claude Code is Anthropic's AI coding assistant built for developers who want a stronger problem-solving workflow than a generic chat tab. It is positioned as an agent-style coding tool that helps with implementation, debugging, codebase understanding, and iterative software work for real projects. Unlike a broad assistant entry for Claude itself, Claude Code deserves its own listing because the product is specifically aimed at development tasks and is used as a dedicated coding workflow rather than a general-purpose chatbot. That makes it relevant for engineers comparing terminal and IDE coding agents, not just model brands. For developers evaluating practical AI coding tools with growing real-world usage, Claude Code is a distinct product that should be represented separately in the Smartoolbox directory.

Google Meta Ads GA4 MCP is an open-source Model Context Protocol server that connects AI assistants to Google Ads, Meta Ads, and Google Analytics 4. It is built for marketers, growth teams, agencies, and technical operators who want campaign management and analytics actions available inside ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, n8n, Windsurf, and other MCP-capable tools. The project exposes hundreds of tools across campaign operations, performance reporting, optimization, and analytics workflows. It solves the common problem of jumping between advertising dashboards by giving an AI assistant structured access to marketing data and controls. It is timely because MCP servers are quickly becoming the integration layer for practical AI agents in business operations.

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Fivetran
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Fivetran is an automated data movement platform that syncs data from applications, databases, files, and event streams into warehouses and lakehouses. It is useful for data engineers, analytics teams, and AI teams that need reliable pipelines before building dashboards, agents, or model workflows on top of company data. Fivetran handles connector maintenance, schema drift, transformations, and governance so teams can spend less time fixing brittle ETL jobs. For agentic AI projects, the platform matters because clean, current, centralized data is often the prerequisite for useful automation. Its differentiator is a broad managed connector catalog paired with enterprise-grade reliability and an ecosystem around open data infrastructure.

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Mercury Agent
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Mercury Agent is a permission-hardened, always-on AI agent framework that runs from the CLI or Telegram. It emphasizes safer autonomy through shell blocklists, folder-level read and write scoping, approval flows, configurable permission modes, token budgets and a SQLite-backed second-brain memory. The project includes built-in tools, skills and a setup wizard, making it more of a deployable personal agent runtime than a simple chatbot wrapper. It is relevant for users who want an agent that can operate across channels while still asking before sensitive actions. It is notable now because it is a newly created GitHub project with significant early stars, npm installation, active documentation and a stable release line.

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Instar
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Instar is coherence infrastructure for persistent coding agents that run on Claude Code or Codex instead of forgetting everything between sessions. It adds scheduling, sessions, memory, Telegram interaction and self-evolving agent patterns so a personal or team agent can keep relationships, lessons and project context across restarts. The official site describes it as a foundation for agents that catch contradictions, remember prior discussions and grow from previous work while staying local-first and engine-agnostic. It is useful for developers and technical operators who already use terminal coding agents but want continuity, background execution and stronger operational habits. Instar is notable today because its npm/GitHub project is moving quickly and reflects a broader shift from single-shot coding prompts toward persistent agent work systems.

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Agent Estimate
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Agent Estimate is an open-source CLI for estimating AI-coding work before an agent starts building. It applies three-point PERT estimation, METR-style reliability thresholds, dependency-aware wave planning, and model fit guidance to answer practical questions: how long might this take, which tasks can run in parallel, which model is reliable enough, and what is the human-equivalent cost? The tool is aimed at developers, engineering managers, freelancers, and agent-heavy teams that need realistic plans for Codex, Claude Code, OpenCode, Cursor, or other coding agents. It is timely because agentic engineering changes project planning: the bottleneck is no longer only typing code, but sequencing uncertain autonomous work with review, verification, and fallback time.

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Containarium
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Containarium is an open-source, self-hostable sandbox built for AI coding agents and MCP-style workflows. It lets users bring an existing agent such as Cursor, Claude Code, or OpenCode while the platform runs the isolated box where risky commands, dependency installs, and project changes can happen. The tool is aimed at developers, platform teams, and security-conscious builders who want agent autonomy without handing their real workstation or production environment to every task. It solves the blast-radius problem by separating the agent’s execution environment from the user’s core system. The Show HN launch makes it notable because sandboxing is becoming a baseline requirement for practical coding agents, not an optional enterprise feature.

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Prezlo
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Prezlo is an AI visibility platform that helps professionals and businesses appear in AI-generated answers, recommendations, and search results. As AI assistants and agents increasingly mediate how people discover products, services, and experts, Prezlo provides tools to monitor, optimize, and improve how a professional profile or brand surfaces in AI-generated outputs. It is aimed at professionals, consultants, agencies, and business owners who want to ensure their expertise is represented accurately when AI systems answer questions in their domain. Prezlo launched on Show HN and addresses a new category of digital presence management: AI search visibility. What makes it timely is the rapid shift from traditional SEO to AI-first discovery, where being recommended by AI assistants matters as much as ranking on Google.

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loushang
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loushang is an AI-native coding orchestration platform that provides a unified multi-model agent runtime with stateful sessions, tool governance, and traceable delivery. It lets developers run multiple AI coding agents — from Claude Code, Codex, DeepSeek, GLM, Qwen, Kimi, and MiniMax — through a single orchestration layer that manages session state, tool permissions, and execution traces. The platform targets engineering teams and technical operators who need to coordinate multiple AI agents across complex coding workflows without losing context or control. With 35 GitHub stars and Apache-2.0 licensing since May 29, 2026, loushang represents the growing category of agent orchestration infrastructure. What makes it notable is the combination of multi-model support with governance controls: teams can define which tools each agent can access, track what happened during execution, and maintain stateful sessions across model switches.

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CLRK
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CLRK is Apoxy’s Kubernetes-native runtime for running LLM agents inside gVisor sandboxes with transparent egress interception. Instead of requiring a particular agent framework, CLRK wraps any HTTP-capable Python, Node, shell, or MCP workload in a controlled execution boundary, then routes LLM calls, tool calls, MCP traffic, credentials, telemetry, logs, traces, and policy enforcement through an Envoy-based egress gateway. It is built for platform and security teams moving agents into production, where observability, credential isolation, rate limits, fallback routing, and audit trails matter more than a demo harness. The official repository documents TaskAgent and DaemonAgent CRDs, worker pools, local dev install, runnable examples, and AGPL/Apache licensing boundaries, making CLRK a strong agent-security and infrastructure listing.

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BOND
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BOND is an AI chief of staff for CEOs and busy executives that turns fragmented company data into a daily decision brief. The platform connects with an executive’s existing stack and surfaces what is on track, what is slipping, who is waiting on approvals, and which actions deserve attention first. It also helps prepare meetings, reorganize calendars, summarize what was missed, and draft follow-ups so leaders can spend more time on leverage and less on coordination overhead. Rather than behaving like another inbox or generic summary feed, BOND positions itself as a focused layer for prioritization and execution. For founders and operators who need fast visibility across projects, teams, and documents, it aims to convert scattered information into clear next actions and a more structured operating rhythm.

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Basata
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Basata is a healthcare back-office automation platform that uses AI to reduce administrative backlog and improve communication between care teams and specialists. It helps clinics handle referral follow-ups, specialist coordination, and operational tasks that often delay patient care. Healthcare organizations can use it to standardize repetitive workflows, track unresolved requests, and free staff from manual phone, fax, and inbox work. Basata is designed for providers, specialty practices, and healthcare operators dealing with fragmented administrative processes. Its strongest angle is vertical focus: instead of broad office automation, it targets the specific communication gaps and paperwork loops that slow down real clinical operations.

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Moxie Docs
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Moxie Docs is an AI documentation workspace for GitHub repositories that continuously indexes a codebase, generates architecture pages and walkthroughs, and flags doc drift when code changes. It is built for engineering teams that want documentation to stay useful without assigning a developer to rewrite stale pages after every merge. Moxie also exposes repo conventions and source-cited context over MCP, so coding agents can answer questions or make changes with a fresher understanding of the project. The workflow fits teams adopting AI coding assistants who need living documentation, cleanup PRs, and searchable repository knowledge in one place. It is notable now because its fresh Show HN launch explicitly combines automatic documentation with MCP-ready agent context rather than treating docs as static Markdown.

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Exa
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Exa is a web search API and AI search engine built specifically for agents, LLM applications, and developer workflows that need high-quality real-time web data. Rather than acting like a generic consumer search tool, Exa provides structured access to web search, page contents, highlights, and specialized indexes for domains like companies, people, code documentation, news, and financial information. That makes it useful for grounding AI systems with fresher and more relevant context while keeping token usage efficient through excerpt extraction. The platform emphasizes search quality, low latency, and enterprise readiness with capabilities such as SOC 2 compliance, zero-data-retention options, and team-oriented access controls. For builders creating AI copilots, research tools, or autonomous agents, Exa offers a practical infrastructure layer for retrieving trustworthy web context at scale.

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Warp
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Warp is a modern terminal application built for developers who want a faster, more intelligent command-line experience. It features AI-powered command suggestions, collaborative sessions, and an intuitive block-based output interface that makes navigating terminal history effortless. Warp integrates with Grok models via SuperGrok or X Premium subscription, giving users direct access to xAI's language models from within the terminal. It is designed for software engineers, DevOps professionals, and technical teams who rely on the terminal daily and want to boost productivity with AI assistance. What sets Warp apart is its native AI integration combined with a reimagined terminal UI that treats command output as structured, searchable blocks rather than a flat scroll of text.

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eve
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eve is a framework for building durable AI agents with a developer experience similar to modern web frameworks. It helps teams structure agent projects as simple folders, preserve state across runs, and compose agent behavior without rebuilding infrastructure from scratch. Developers can use eve to prototype assistants, automation agents, research workflows, and internal tools that need memory, repeatability, and clean deployment paths. It is designed for software teams, AI engineers, and product builders who want agent systems that feel maintainable rather than like one-off scripts. eve stands out because it focuses on the application layer around agents: opinionated project structure, durable defaults, and a workflow that makes agent development feel closer to shipping a production app.

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inErrata
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inErrata is a graph-powered memory and knowledge layer for AI coding agents that keeps track of errors, investigations, fixes, and reusable context. Its homepage describes a shared corpus that works like Stack Overflow for the agent ecosystem, with graph navigation, MCP tools, OpenAPI/A2A support, and compatibility with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Windsurf, OpenClaw, Gemini, GitHub Copilot, and other clients. It is aimed at developers who repeatedly pay token costs to rediscover the same solution or debug the same class of issue across agents. inErrata is notable now because agent memory is becoming infrastructure: teams need searchable, causal debugging history rather than isolated chat transcripts and forgotten terminal sessions.

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NEONIA
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NEONIA is a serverless MCP platform, package manager, and tool registry designed for agentic workflows. It gives AI agents a way to discover and use tools through a managed registry instead of forcing each project to wire up integrations manually. The product is for developers building agent systems that need reusable tools, repeatable setup, and a cleaner deployment surface for MCP-style capabilities. It solves the operational problem of packaging agent tools so they can be found, installed, and run consistently across workflows. NEONIA is notable now because the agent ecosystem is standardizing around tool protocols, and builders increasingly need registries and runtime infrastructure rather than one-off local scripts.

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Microsoft Foundry
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Microsoft Foundry is an interoperable AI platform for building, deploying, and governing AI apps and agents at scale. It brings together model access, agent tooling, search, orchestration, observability, and security controls in one environment, so teams can move from prototype to production without stitching together a fragmented stack. Developers can use it to compare models, build chatbots, create autonomous agent workflows, connect enterprise data, and manage production AI systems with stronger governance. It is built for startups, software teams, data scientists, IT admins, and enterprises that need both speed and control. What makes Microsoft Foundry stand out is its combination of broad model ecosystem access, native Azure integration, and enterprise-grade security for real-world AI deployment.

NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Ultra is an open-weight large language model aimed at high-performance enterprise AI, coding, and agentic workloads. The model is designed to deliver strong reasoning and fast inference efficiency, giving developers a foundation for assistants, automation systems, retrieval workflows, and custom domain agents without depending only on closed hosted models. It is especially relevant for AI teams that want deployable model weights, NVIDIA ecosystem support, and a path toward production inference on accelerated infrastructure. Nemotron 3 Ultra is differentiated by its scale-to-efficiency balance: it targets frontier-level capability while remaining practical for organizations building private, controllable AI systems.

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Claude Managed Agents
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Claude Managed Agents is a hosted agent platform from Anthropic that lets teams run long-horizon AI workflows in secure cloud sandboxes without building the orchestration layer from scratch. It supports persistent sessions, scoped permissions, checkpointing, tool use, and coordination patterns that help developers ship autonomous task systems with more reliability. The product is especially useful for engineering teams, startups, and enterprises building internal copilots, research agents, or customer-facing automations that need durable execution instead of simple chat responses. What makes Claude Managed Agents stand out is the combination of Anthropic model access with managed runtime infrastructure, which reduces operational overhead while giving builders a clearer path from prototype to production-grade agent deployment.

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Guard Skills
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Guard Skills is an open-source collection of quality gates for AI coding agents. The repository provides skills that catch common AI-generated failure modes in code, tests and documentation before an agent’s output is trusted or merged. That makes it useful for developers using Claude Code, Cursor, Codex-style CLIs, or custom coding agents who want a lightweight review layer focused on the recurring mistakes models make: brittle tests, incomplete docs, unsafe edits, or plausible-but-broken implementations. GitHub discovery found it as a fresh high-star AI-agent repository created in June 2026, and the official repo plus Skills page confirm a concrete installable skill collection. For Smartoolbox visitors, it fits as a practical developer workflow safeguard for agent-assisted software work.

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PrismCat
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PrismCat is a local, transparent proxy and debugging console for LLM APIs that lets developers inspect, log, and debug every request and response between their application and AI model providers. It is aimed at developers building AI-powered products, agents, and workflows who need visibility into what their code is actually sending to OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, or other LLM endpoints. Instead of adding logging code to every API call or relying on opaque provider dashboards, PrismCat sits as a local proxy and provides a real-time console showing prompts, completions, token counts, latency, and error patterns. The project launched on Show HN and has 68 GitHub stars with MIT licensing and TypeScript implementation. It is a developer-focused observability tool for the LLM API layer, filling a similar niche to Charles Proxy or mitmproxy but purpose-built for AI workflows.

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Agent Manager
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Agent Manager is a cross-platform desktop application for managing local AI agents and MCP servers from one window. The official GitHub README describes a Tauri 2 and React 19 app where users can add agents, start or stop them with one click, watch logs, use embedded web UIs and interactive terminals, control agents with natural language, manage ports, and create temporary public sharing links. It is useful for developers and power users who run multiple local agents, MCP services, or business-analysis agents and are tired of juggling terminal sessions and browser tabs. The project surfaced in fresh GitHub MCP searches and has a clear installation and feature document. It maps well to Smartoolbox’s AI Agents and productivity audience despite being early-stage.

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Manufact
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Manufact is a cloud platform and framework ecosystem for building, deploying, testing, monitoring, and distributing MCP apps and servers for ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, Gemini, and other agent clients. The homepage positions Manufact Cloud, the mcp-use SDK, inspector tools, templates, cross-client testing, publishing checks, public chat surfaces, and analytics as one production stack for MCP developers. It is useful for teams moving from a local MCP server to a shippable app or connector that needs hosting, observability, marketplace-readiness, and multi-client compatibility. The Launch HN result surfaced Manufact as an MCP Cloud company, while official Manufact and Y Combinator pages verify the product, customers, documentation, pricing, and open-source mcp-use adoption. It is a strong Smartoolbox fit for agent infrastructure and code-assistant builders.

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Apify
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Apify is a web scraping and automation platform that provides ready-made actors for extracting data from websites, social media, and online marketplaces at scale. Developers can deploy scraping workflows in the cloud without managing infrastructure, with built-in proxy rotation and data export. Built for data engineers, growth teams, and researchers who need reliable web data collection without building scrapers from scratch.

Hey HN! My name is Christian, and I’m the co-founder of <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;frigade.ai">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;frigade.ai</a>. We’ve built an AI agent that automatically learns how to use any web-based product, and in turn guides users directly in the UI, automatically generates documentation, and even takes actions on a user’s behalf. Think of it as Clippy from the old MS Office. But on steroids. And actually helpful.<p>You can see the agent and tool-calling SDK in action here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=UPe0t3A1Vpg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=UPe0t3A1Vpg</a><p>How is this different from other AI customer support products?<p>Most AI &quot;copilots&quot; are really just glorified chatbots. They skim your help center and spit out some nonspecific bullet points. Basically some ‘hopes and prayers’ that your users will figure it out. Ultimately, this puts the burden on the user to follow through. And assumes companies are keeping their help center up-to-date with every product change. That means constant screenshots of new product UI or features for accurate instructions.These solutions leverage only a fraction of what’s possible with AI, which can now reason about software interfaces extensively.<p>With Frigade AI, we guide the user directly in the product and build on-demand tours based on the current user’s state and context. The agents can also take actions immediately on a user’s behalf, e.g. inviting a colleague to a workspace or retrieving billing information (via our tool calling SDK).<p>This was only made possible recently. The latest frontier models (GPT 4.1, Claude 4, Gemini 2.5, etc.) are able to reason about UIs and workflows in a way that simply didn’t work just 6 months ago. That’s why we’re so excited to bring this technology to the forefront of complex legacy SaaS applications that are not yet AI enabled.<p>How does it work?<p>1. Invite agent@frigade.ai to your product. You can send multiple invitations based on distinct roles.<p>2. Our agent automatically explores and reasons about your application.<p>3. Attach any existing help center resources or training documentation to supplement the agent’s understanding. Totally optional.<p>4. Install the agent assistant Javascript snippet (just a few lines).<p>5. That’s it. Your users can now start asking questions and get on demand product tours and questions answered in real time without any overhead.<p>This process takes only a few minutes. Once running, you can improve the agent by rating and providing feedback to the responses it provides. If you want to integrate further, you can also hook up your own code to our tool calling SDK to enable the agent to look up customer info, issue refunds, etc. directly. These calls can be made with just a few lines of code by describing the tool and its parameters in natural language and passing a single Javascript promise (e.g. make an API call, call a function in your app, etc.).<p>Would love to hear what the HN crowd thinks about this approach! Are you building your own AI agent from scratch, or looking to embed one off the shelf?

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Nubase
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Nubase is an open-source AI-native backend and deploy layer designed for coding agents that need to turn generated demos into real applications. It bundles database, authentication, storage, assets, functions, AI gateway, memory, and cron into one self-hostable service, giving an agent the tools to model data, publish frontends, deploy backend logic, and schedule recurring work without juggling separate accounts. The project is especially relevant for vibe coding, prototype-to-production workflows, and teams experimenting with autonomous software builders. It is notable now because it is a recent, highly starred GitHub RAG/agent infrastructure candidate with an official website, npm package, Docker image, and detailed README.

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VisualBuild
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VisualBuild is a desktop and MCP automation skill builder for creating repeatable automations once and running them without ongoing AI costs. The official page describes a local-first tool for Windows and macOS that can build desktop automations and package them as standalone executables, with a free starter tier. It is useful for operators, power users, and developers who want to turn an AI-assisted workflow into a reusable automation rather than paying for repeated model calls. VisualBuild appeared on Show HN with the pitch “Use AI once to build the automation, then run it with $0 in AI,” plus a related record-and-replay alternative post. Its MCP angle also makes it relevant for agent ecosystem workflows.

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Lexa
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Lexa is a fast local code-intelligence tool that turns a codebase into a portable, queryable graph for both humans and AI agents. It indexes structure, text, symbols, imports, content hashes and recent edits so coding tools can use one stable view of a project instead of repeatedly scanning files ad hoc. The project is built in Rust, is MCP-ready, and emphasizes compact context, traceable lookups, hash-aware reads, and atomic local operations. Lexa is aimed at developers using AI coding assistants who want better context quality without sending their repository to a cloud service. It is notable now because agentic coding workflows need accurate repository maps; without that, even strong models waste tokens rediscovering code and make riskier changes.

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ClariLayer
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ClariLayer is a context layer for AI data agents that helps individual analysts stop re-explaining their warehouse, SQL, dbt models, and business definitions in every coding-agent session. Its official page describes an MCP-delivered developer application for Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex that bootstraps context from existing SQL, reconciles definitions against the warehouse, remembers corrections, and recalls that context in-flow. The product is useful for data analysts and analytics engineers who ask agents to write queries, investigate metrics, or maintain dbt projects but need the agent to respect team-specific definitions. It surfaced in fresh GitHub MCP searches and was verified through the official homepage’s structured SoftwareApplication data, which makes the product identity and workflow concrete enough for Smartoolbox.

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Semble
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Semble is a fast code-search tool for AI agents that aims to use dramatically fewer tokens than grep-and-read workflows. It is aimed at developers building or operating coding agents, MCP servers, and AI IDE workflows where context retrieval quality directly affects output quality and cost. The project provides a Python package and MCP-oriented usage so agents can locate relevant code accurately before editing. Semble solves the problem of agents flooding context windows with irrelevant files by turning code search into a more precise retrieval step. It is notable now because agentic coding systems increasingly need specialized retrieval infrastructure, not just bigger context windows, to work efficiently on real repositories.

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Naoma AI
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Naoma AI is an AI-powered video demo agent for B2B SaaS companies that delivers live, personalized product demonstrations directly in the browser, available 24/7 without requiring a human sales representative. The agent adapts the demo flow based on the visitor's role, industry, and specific questions — creating a tailored experience that mirrors a live sales conversation. For SaaS teams, this means qualified prospects can experience the full product value at any time, accelerating the sales cycle and reducing pressure on human demo resources. Naoma integrates with existing CRM tools, captures lead information throughout the demo, and hands off warm opportunities to sales teams with full context on each prospect interaction.

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NVIDIA Cosmos 3
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NVIDIA Cosmos 3 is a multimodal world model family for building robotics, autonomous vehicle, and physical AI systems. It unifies language, images, video, audio, and action into a Mixture-of-Transformers architecture so developers can generate synthetic training data, simulate embodied scenarios, and evaluate agents before real-world deployment. The release includes Nano and Super variants with open weights, making it useful for research teams, robotics labs, industrial digital twin builders, and companies prototyping autonomous workflows. Cosmos 3 stands out because it connects generative video and image capabilities with action-aware world modeling, giving teams a more practical foundation for testing physical AI behavior at scale.

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Buildy
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Buildy is an app-hosting layer for AI chats and coding agents that turns generated mini-apps into persistent URLs with shared data storage. Instead of losing a useful tracker, calculator or internal tool when a chat closes, users can ask ChatGPT, Claude, Codex, Cursor or other agents to create an app, then keep using and updating it through Buildy. The platform exposes MCP tools, OAuth-based access, hosted ES modules, a key-value datastore, public app links and starter apps for workflows such as meal tracking, flashcards, watchlists and bill splitting. It is useful for AI power users and builders who want lightweight personal software without standing up infrastructure. Its June launch makes it timely as agent-built apps move from throwaway demos to persistent everyday tools.

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Armorer
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Armorer is a secure local control plane for running AI agents inside Docker-based sandboxes. It is designed for developers using tools such as Claude Code, Codex, or other coding agents who need safer filesystem, network, and execution boundaries before giving an agent real access to a machine. The project provides an install path, human-readable documentation, and local runtime controls so teams can separate experimentation from sensitive host resources. It solves the growing problem of powerful autonomous agents executing commands without enough containment. Armorer is notable now because agent security is becoming a practical daily issue: developers want agent productivity, but they also need guardrails, repeatability, and auditable local isolation.

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Maritime
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Maritime is a developer-focused platform that lets you deploy and host AI agents in the cloud for just $1 per month. It handles all the infrastructure complexity — scaling, routing, and orchestration — so developers can focus on building agent logic rather than managing servers. Whether you're building customer service bots, research pipelines, or workflow automation, Maritime provides reliable compute with simple deployment tooling. It supports popular agent frameworks and integrates with standard APIs, making it straightforward to move from prototype to production. Ideal for indie developers, startups, and teams who need affordable, scalable agent hosting without committing to expensive cloud infrastructure from day one.

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Rowboat
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Rowboat is an open-source, local-first AI coworker that turns everyday work into a long-lived knowledge graph and uses it to complete tasks on the user’s computer. It connects to email, meeting notes, documents, Obsidian-compatible Markdown vaults, and optional MCP/Composio integrations, then keeps inspectable working memory instead of rebuilding context from scratch for every prompt. Users can ask it to prep meetings, draft material, update live notes, research with Exa, or connect external tools while keeping data and model choices under local control. The recent Show HN listing framed it as a local-first Claude Desktop alternative, and the official repository verifies substantial code, docs, desktop setup, BYO-model support, knowledge graph memory, and active YC-backed product identity.

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DeductiveAI
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DeductiveAI is an AI software-debugging product focused on finding and resolving bugs in complex codebases. It helps engineering teams analyze failures, reason about likely causes, and move from bug report to fix with less manual investigation. The tool is relevant for developers, QA teams, platform engineers, and organizations that want faster issue resolution across production software. DeductiveAI stands out through its emphasis on deductive reasoning for software defects rather than broad code completion alone. By targeting the debugging loop, it can support teams that need to reduce time spent reproducing issues, tracing root causes, and validating fixes before bugs reach customers.

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AI Boost
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AI Boost is an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server that serves as an expertise layer for LLM agents. It captures domain knowledge, workflow patterns, and operational expertise built up over years, then injects that context into AI agents on demand. Compatible with Claude Code, Cursor, and any MCP client, AI Boost lets professionals encode their hard-won know-how into structured expertise packs that agents can access in seconds. Featured on Show HN on June 8, 2026, it targets power users of AI coding and automation tools who want their agents to understand domain-specific conventions, shortcuts, and best practices without repeated prompt engineering. The product is live at ai-boost.io with a clean landing page and MCP integration documentation.

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Ocarina
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Ocarina is an automation framework for testing MCP servers with deterministic YAML playbooks instead of live LLM calls. It is built for developers, platform teams and agent-tool maintainers who need repeatable checks against real Model Context Protocol servers before connecting them to coding agents or production workflows. A playbook can replay expected tool interactions, verify responses and make MCP behavior easier to debug in CI. The Show HN launch is timely because MCP adoption is accelerating, but many teams still test server behavior manually through chat clients. Ocarina turns that process into versioned automation, helping teams catch regressions, document server contracts and evaluate agent-facing tools without burning tokens or relying on nondeterministic model output.

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AgentArk
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AgentArk is an open-source, self-hosted operating system for building and running AI agents from prompts, tools, apps, automations, and watchers. It targets developers and technical teams that want agent workflows under their own control rather than scattered across hosted chat products. The project combines a local web UI, Docker Compose installation, monitoring, context distillation, boundary controls, and agent deployment patterns so teams can prototype useful automations while keeping data and execution surfaces visible. It is notable now because it appeared in fresh Show HN discovery and ships as a substantial Rust and TypeScript codebase with clear setup docs, not just a concept demo.

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Snapname
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Snapname is a macOS app that uses local AI to automatically rename your screenshots with meaningful names. Powered by a bundled Gemma 4 model, it processes screenshots entirely on-device — images never leave your Mac. SnapName watches your ~/Screenshots folder and generates three AI-powered name suggestions for each new screenshot, or auto-saves with the first suggestion in hands-free mode. It works alongside any screenshot tool without replacing it, requiring macOS 13+ on Apple Silicon with CPU and GPU support. Perfect for developers, designers, and knowledge workers who accumulate hundreds of screenshots and need them to be searchable and organized without manual renaming.

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VT Code
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VT Code is an open-source coding agent built around LLM-native code understanding, robust shell safety, and support for multiple model providers with automatic failover. It is designed for developers who want a local agent that can reason over code, manage context efficiently, and interact with shell workflows while reducing risky command execution. The project includes installation options, agent skills, MCP integration, and Zed Agent Client Protocol support, making it relevant for users building flexible coding-agent setups rather than relying on a single IDE. Its recent Show HN appearance highlights continued demand for transparent, hackable coding agents. VT Code stands out by pairing semantic code intelligence with explicit safety and provider-choice design.

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Abridge
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Abridge is a healthcare AI platform that turns clinical conversations into structured documentation and workflow intelligence. It captures patient-clinician interactions, drafts notes, supports EHR workflows, and helps reduce administrative load for medical teams. Health systems can use it for ambient documentation, prior authorization support, and surfacing relevant context from visits and records. Abridge is built for hospitals, clinicians, and healthcare organizations that need AI assistance while maintaining clinical accuracy and workflow fit. Its differentiator is the move beyond simple transcription: it connects spoken encounters to broader clinical intelligence, helping care teams document faster and make better use of patient information across the healthcare workflow.

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Chrome Skills
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Chrome Skills is a browser productivity feature that lets users save and rerun reusable AI-powered workflows across webpages with a single click instead of rewriting the same prompt every time. It helps with tasks like summarizing pages, extracting structured information, comparing content, and applying repeatable browsing actions across tabs and sites. The feature is especially useful for researchers, operators, students, and knowledge workers who spend a lot of time doing similar web tasks and want a faster way to turn one good prompt into a reusable tool. What makes Chrome Skills stand out is its native placement inside Chrome, where browser actions become portable, lightweight AI helpers that fit naturally into everyday web work rather than living in a separate app or prompt library.

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Hyper
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Hyper is an AI-powered company operations platform that runs background agents to continuously synthesize team activity, decisions, and institutional knowledge. It positions itself as a self-driving company brain: instead of requiring managers or team leads to manually document what happened, Hyper's agents quietly observe work signals and surface relevant context when needed. The platform is aimed at fast-moving startups and scale-ups where institutional memory erodes quickly as teams grow, people switch projects, and asynchronous work creates information gaps. It launched on Show HN and the official homepage at heyhyper.ai describes background agents that synthesize team activity into actionable knowledge. Hyper fits the growing category of AI-native knowledge management and operational intelligence tools that go beyond simple search or chat.

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Airtable Assistant
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Airtable Assistant expands Airtable into a more complete AI app-building and workflow automation platform for business teams. It combines conversational app creation, AI agents, research, analysis, and no-code workflow automation so teams can turn data and operational processes into production-ready internal tools faster. The platform highlights Omni for natural-language app building and field agents for tasks such as lead enrichment, campaign content generation, and feedback triage. This makes Airtable Assistant appealing to operations, marketing, and product teams that want practical AI embedded directly into the systems they already use rather than a standalone chatbot. It is best suited for organizations looking to deploy AI inside repeatable workflows, structured data operations, and custom business applications without heavy engineering overhead.

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swarm-test
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swarm-test is an open-source reliability and chaos-testing tool for multi-agent AI systems. It statically analyzes CrewAI, LangGraph, AutoGen and custom agent topologies to find cascade risks, single points of failure, fragile dependencies and weak handoffs before those systems reach production. The README emphasizes that it requires no live LLM calls and no API cost, then produces a Swarm Score plus an interactive D3 dashboard with agent graphs, health tables and findings grouped by severity. This is useful for developers building agent workflows where individual agents may look reliable but the end-to-end system breaks when many agents are chained. The Show HN launch and repository docs make it a concrete developer tool rather than a research note.

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opencode Zed Support
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opencode Zed Support connects the opencode AI coding-agent workflow with the Zed editor ecosystem. It is useful for developers who want editor-native access to agentic coding assistance while keeping workflows lightweight and local-first. The signal matters because AI coding tools are moving beyond standalone chat panels toward integrated development surfaces where planning, editing, debugging, and review happen in the same workspace. Teams evaluating agentic development stacks can use opencode with Zed as part of a more inspectable alternative to closed coding assistants.

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chrome-use
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chrome-use is an open-source browser automation CLI that lets AI agents drive the real Chrome profile a user is already logged into. Instead of launching a sterile browser that triggers logins, CAPTCHAs or anti-bot checks, it connects agents such as Claude Code, Cursor, Codex or custom scripts to the user’s existing Chrome window and visible session. The README describes extension-relay architecture, anti-detection behavior, humanized actions, multi-agent isolation and a CLI for agent-controlled browsing. It is useful for developers building practical computer-use automations that need access to authenticated web apps without sharing credentials with a remote service. The project surfaced in Show HN as a fresh agent-browser-control tool and has official repository documentation plus a project homepage.

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Nori Browser
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Nori Browser is an Electron-based browser built specifically for browser automation with AI agents. It pairs a normal Chromium browsing surface with an integrated terminal sidebar that can run Claude Code or a shell, then exposes the same live browser session over the Chrome DevTools Protocol for Playwright-driven actions. The result is a workflow where a human can browse normally, ask the agent to operate on the visible session, and keep automation grounded in the page state they are actually seeing. Nori Browser is useful for developers testing web apps, scraping workflows, QA tasks, or agentic browser experiments. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch with a public repo and concrete implementation details.

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SkillKit
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SkillKit is a cross-platform skills framework for AI coding agents that helps developers write a capability once and reuse it across many agent environments. The platform is designed for teams working with tools such as Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Windsurf, and GitHub Copilot, reducing duplication when building structured prompts, workflows, and reusable agent behaviors. Its core value is portability: instead of maintaining separate implementations for each coding assistant, SkillKit provides a unified way to package and deploy skills across dozens of agents. That makes it useful for engineering teams standardizing internal AI workflows, distributing coding playbooks, and keeping agent behavior more consistent as they experiment with multiple coding copilots and agent runtimes.

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BRAIN²
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BRAIN² is ClickUp’s multiplayer AI workspace layer for companies that want shared memory, model routing, and team context inside daily work. It helps teams connect company knowledge, tasks, documents, and conversations so AI assistance can act with more awareness of projects and organizational context. Users can apply it to planning, writing, task automation, knowledge retrieval, and cross-functional collaboration where generic chatbots lose important background. It is built for operations teams, product teams, managers, and growing companies that already coordinate work in ClickUp or want a more contextual AI workspace. BRAIN² stands out because it emphasizes collective company memory rather than isolated personal prompts, turning AI into a shared operational system.

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Plurai vibe training
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Plurai vibe training is a method for training small language-model evaluators and guardrails around a specific agent workflow. Instead of relying only on generic frontier-model judges, teams can create lower-latency evaluators tuned to the exact behavior, tone and task boundaries their agent needs. It is useful for AI product teams building agents that require quality checks, safety gates, regression tests and production monitoring without expensive inference on every step. The approach stands out because it treats evaluation as a lightweight custom model layer, promising cheaper and faster checks for narrow use cases. It is best understood as agent reliability infrastructure rather than an end-user chatbot.

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Mirrors
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Mirrors is a testing platform for AI agents that turns production traces into isolated, runnable copies of an agent’s real environment. Teams can drop in traces from an agent development kit or observability platform, let Mirrors rebuild schemas, tools, and seeded data, then replay agent changes against deterministic worlds before users see them. It is aimed at companies shipping agents that can refund, delete, send, or mutate real systems, where regression tests need to exercise realistic tools without touching production. The July 2 Show HN launch made it timely, and the official homepage clearly explains trace ingestion, isolated mirrors, coverage scoring, golden cases, API access, and free/custom plans. Smartoolbox users building production agents would value it as QA infrastructure for agent reliability.

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Hyperagent
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Hyperagent is an AI agent platform for building, deploying, and managing agentic workflows that perform real work across business tasks. It focuses on reusable skills, evaluation loops, and fleet-style deployment so teams can move from one-off prompts to repeatable automated processes. The platform is useful for operators, founders, product teams, and automation builders who want agents to produce webpages, dashboards, briefings, code, or other structured outputs. Hyperagent stands out by emphasizing workflow reliability and evaluation, giving organizations a clearer path from experimental agents to monitored systems that can be reused across teams.

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role-model
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role-model is an open protocol and reference router for choosing the right AI model for each request across local and cloud endpoints. It gives developers a structured way to describe what a task needs, what an endpoint can do, what policy allows, and why a routing decision was made. The repository documents hybrid local-local, local-cloud, and cloud-cloud routing, with policy, budget, latency, capability and observability artifacts separated into explicit pieces. It is useful for AI app builders who want more explainable model selection than hardcoded provider calls. role-model surfaced in fresh Show HN and GitHub searches, and it fits the growing need for portable routing as teams mix small local models, expensive frontier models, and specialized providers.

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Konxios
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Konxios is a local-first AI operating system that connects LM Studio, Ollama, and cloud models into a personal automation workspace. It is aimed at users who want a desktop-style hub for tasks, workflows, and intelligent assistance without depending only on hosted chat services. The official site positions Konxios as an AI-powered OS for managing work, automating repetitive actions, and combining local and cloud inference options. It is a good Smartoolbox fit because it sits between productivity software and agent infrastructure: less a single chatbot, more a control layer for AI-assisted workflows. The product surfaced in fresh Show HN results on 2026-06-19 and has a reachable official homepage.

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BlameBot
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BlameBot is an autonomous incident-intelligence agent for engineering teams running modern web deployments. The project connects alerts from services such as Vercel, Sentry, and uptime monitoring, explains what broke, identifies likely ownership, notifies the right person in Slack, and can roll back a failing deployment. It is useful for small teams that need faster on-call triage without waking everyone for every production issue. The repository is presented as a Vercel Zero to Agent hackathon submission, with a live demo and integration-focused README. It is notable now because it shows a practical, narrow agent workflow: closing the loop from deploy failure to incident response instead of acting as a general chatbot.

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opendesk
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opendesk is an open-source computer-use framework that gives AI agents eyes and hands on one or more desktops. It exposes screenshots, mouse and keyboard control, UI interaction, OCR, workflow recording, scheduling, and remote-machine control, with SDK packages for agent integrations. The tool is aimed at developers who want agents to operate normal software across macOS, Linux, and Windows instead of being limited to text APIs or browser pages. It is especially relevant for internal automation, QA, remote operations, and agent research where real desktop state matters. It is notable now because the May 2026 repository is a fresh, focused entry in computer-use infrastructure and explicitly supports connecting desktop control into agent workflows.

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Cloudflare Workers AI
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Cloudflare Workers AI is Cloudflare’s serverless AI inference platform for running models close to users on its global network. It lets developers call text, image, embedding, and other AI models from code without provisioning their own GPU infrastructure, which makes it attractive for teams shipping AI features quickly. Common use cases include chat experiences, AI-powered search, content generation, classification, and edge-native application logic. The platform is best suited for developers, startups, and product teams that want lower operational overhead while keeping latency low and deployment simple. What makes Cloudflare Workers AI unique is its combination of serverless developer ergonomics, global edge distribution, and tight integration with the broader Cloudflare stack, giving builders a practical route to production AI inference without managing the usual infrastructure complexity.

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TurnZero
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TurnZero is a local-first persistent context system for AI coding sessions. It runs as an MCP server and injects relevant personal and expert priors before the first turn, so assistants like Claude Code, Cursor, Claude Desktop, and Gemini CLI start with the user’s standards, workflow rules, and stack-specific lessons already available. The tool is for developers, DevOps engineers, SREs, security teams, and platform builders who repeatedly correct the same AI mistakes across projects. TurnZero is notable because it targets the cold-start problem in coding agents without storing raw prompts or centralizing private history. Its Show HN launch and active GitHub README make it a practical fit for the agentic development workflow category.

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Imagent
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Imagent is an open-source creative tool layer that lets AI agents generate images, video, and speech as first-class workflow steps. It provides a shared local workspace, CLI, desktop app, unified provider interface, asset library, output history, and documentation so generated media can be organized and reused instead of disappearing into one-off chat sessions. Developers and creative automation builders can use it to connect multiple media providers behind a consistent interface and give agents a persistent creative production surface. It appeared in a July 3 Show HN launch and was verified against the official unliftedq/imagent GitHub repository, which documents the product concept, desktop and CLI surfaces, architecture, docs, and local workflow. For Smartoolbox, it fits AI agents, creative generation, and developer tooling.

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Persana AI
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Persana AI is an AI-powered sales prospecting and go-to-market automation platform built to help revenue teams find leads, enrich contact data, monitor buying signals, and personalize outreach at scale. The platform combines more than 100 data sources with AI enrichment and workflow automation so teams can define ideal customer profiles, detect signals like funding events, hiring trends, job changes, website activity, and reviews, then deploy AI agents to generate outbound messaging and sync actions into CRM and engagement tools. Persana positions itself as a full GTM engine rather than a simple lead database, aiming to replace fragmented enrichment, intent, and outreach workflows with a single system. For sales and marketing organizations that want more automated prospecting and signal-based outreach, Persana AI offers a clear standalone product with strong commercial positioning.

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Google AI Studio
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Google AI Studio is a browser-based development platform for building, testing, and shipping applications powered by Gemini models. It gives developers a fast path from prompt experiments to production-ready workflows by supporting chat-based prototyping, multimodal inputs, prompt iteration, and API integration in one place. Teams can use it to explore model behavior, generate structured outputs, create lightweight app experiences, and accelerate early product development without heavy setup. It is especially useful for builders who want to move quickly from idea to working prototype while staying inside Google’s model ecosystem. What makes Google AI Studio stand out is the tight loop between experimentation and implementation, including features that help turn conversations into usable app logic faster. For developers, founders, and product teams, it serves as a practical launchpad for Gemini-powered tools and automations.

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Bitloops
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Bitloops is an open-source intelligence layer that builds and maintains a typed, queryable model of a software repository for AI-native development. Instead of forcing agents, reviewers, or new developers to repeatedly rediscover project structure from raw text, Bitloops indexes architecture, files, symbols, relationships, and system state into a local knowledge layer. It is aimed at teams using coding agents, code review assistants, or large repositories where context loss slows every session. The project includes a website, docs, quickstart, and DevQL concepts, making it more than a small demo. It is notable now because Show HN surfaced it as a practical answer to a growing problem: AI agents need durable codebase understanding, not just longer prompts.

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AI Flow Architect
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AI Flow Architect is a multi-model workflow engine that structures agent work into a Plan → Approve → Execute → Audit pipeline. Its dual-brain design separates a planner model from an arbiter model, using quality arbitration to catch hallucination leaks, review execution, and reduce wasted tokens before results are accepted. The tool is useful for developers, automation builders, and agent-heavy teams that want more reliable multi-step workflows than a single chat loop can provide. It surfaced in fresh GitHub workflow-automation searches with clear AI-agent positioning and a zero-config token-saving angle. AI Flow Architect fits Smartoolbox as a developer productivity and agent-orchestration tool for teams experimenting with safer autonomous workflows.

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Poke
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Poke is a messaging-first AI assistant that lets people use an agent through familiar channels instead of learning a separate productivity app. Its core value is taking action from natural conversations, helping users manage personal admin, coordinate everyday tasks, and move from idea to execution with lower friction. That makes it appealing for consumers who want a practical AI helper for life logistics, reminders, lightweight planning, and on-the-go requests across the tools they already use. Poke stands out by emphasizing accessibility and conversational ease rather than a traditional dashboard workflow, which lowers the barrier for mainstream use of agent software. For users who want an AI assistant that feels closer to texting than operating enterprise software, Poke offers a consumer-friendly take on personal AI agents.

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Thomas
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Thomas is an AI founder and virtual human designed to start, run, and grow companies as an autonomous business operator. The project presents an AI agent that can make founder-like decisions, coordinate work, and build ventures rather than simply answer questions or complete isolated tasks. It is aimed at people interested in AI entrepreneurship, autonomous companies, startup experimentation, and agentic business workflows. Thomas is unusual because it is framed as a YC-backed virtual founder with its own company-building identity, not just a productivity assistant or workflow bot. That makes it relevant for tracking the emerging category of AI operators that act more like digital entrepreneurs.

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Godcoder
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Godcoder is a local-first, open-source AI coding agent packaged as a native desktop app. Its main promise is privacy and control: users bring their own LLM key, and source code stays on the local machine instead of transiting a vendor backend. The README goes beyond standard code editing, describing harness mode for building and improving its own agent harness and CoWork mode for GUI or operating-system automation tasks such as clicking, typing, opening apps, sending email, and e-signing. That makes it relevant for developers who want an AI coding agent with desktop automation abilities and local execution boundaries. It surfaced in GitHub’s recent MCP/ai-agent searches and was verified from the official eli-labz/Godcoder repository documentation.

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Topolog
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Topolog is an AI-assisted planning tool that turns goals into dependency graphs and schedules work around them. Users describe a goal, then Topolog drafts milestones, dependencies, atomic tasks, critical paths, and a day-by-day plan using a typed planning language rather than unstructured prose. It is aimed at individuals and teams who need project planning with computed dates, uncertainty ranges, budget trade-offs, and adaptive scheduling, but do not want heavyweight project-management setup. The product is notable because it treats every plan as an executable graph program: the AI drafts the structure while the engine validates dependencies, completion odds, and scheduling constraints. Its June Show HN launch makes it a fresh productivity listing for Smartoolbox visitors looking for more rigorous AI planning than a chat-generated checklist.

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Cofounder 2
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Cofounder 2 is an AI agent orchestration platform for building and running agent-heavy startups from a single workspace. It helps solo founders and small teams coordinate specialized agents across engineering, sales, marketing, research, and operations instead of stitching together separate assistants by hand. Users can plan products, delegate implementation tasks, generate outreach, manage launch work, and keep multiple company functions moving with less manual context switching. The platform is best for entrepreneurs, indie hackers, and early-stage teams that want execution leverage before hiring a full staff. Cofounder 2 stands out because it frames agents as an operating layer for an entire company, not just as isolated chatbots or coding helpers.

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Spiral 4.0
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Spiral 4.0 is an agent-native writing partner that helps individuals and teams produce drafts in a consistent voice. It uses a style engine to learn tone, structure, and recurring editorial patterns, then applies that style across essays, memos, posts, and collaborative documents. The release adds MCP, CLI, and API access, making it useful for writers who want style-aware assistance inside their existing workflows rather than another isolated editor. Teams can use workspaces to capture a shared voice and reduce rewriting between contributors. Its strongest angle is the combination of AI writing assistance with programmable access, so developers and editorial teams can build repeatable, voice-preserving writing systems.

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Parcle Second Brain
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Parcle Second Brain is a real-time data layer for AI agents that connects databases, documents, Google Drive, Notion and similar sources so agentic systems can retrieve trusted context instead of guessing. The product page positions Parcle as infrastructure for teams that want AI workflows to pull the right business data, reduce hallucinations, and produce outputs that can be audited. It is a good fit for founders, operations teams, and developers building internal agents over scattered company knowledge. The Show HN launch described it as all-in-one memory for AI agents, while the official page confirms a concrete product rather than a discussion post. Smartoolbox visitors can evaluate it as a memory/RAG-style agent layer focused on practical, connected business context.

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mAItion
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mAItion is an open-source knowledge-management and RAG workspace for organizations that want to chat with scattered internal data without building every connector, ingestion job, and chat interface from scratch. It combines scheduled data ingestion, deduplication, MediaWiki and S3 connectors, web-search ingestion, document upload, code execution, speech features, image generation hooks, MCP server support, and multi-user permissions into one deployable system. The product is aimed at teams with wikis, files, search results, and operational knowledge spread across systems who need a practical private AI interface over that content. Its recent Show HN appearance and public documentation make it notable as a more complete, self-hostable alternative to small RAG demos.

AI Agent Token Cost Calculator is a free TinyOps Studio utility for estimating how much Codex, Claude Code, and similar coding-agent loops cost each month. It is aimed at founders, engineering managers, and solo developers who are letting agents run commands, read files, and retry work many times per day but do not yet have a feel for token waste. Users enter average input/output tokens, run frequency, provider pricing, and expected avoidable waste; the page then estimates monthly spend and highlights where noisy logs, repeated context reads, and oversized outputs can inflate budgets. It surfaced as a fresh Show HN launch and fits Smartoolbox as a practical planning tool for agentic development workflows.

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Replymer
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Replymer is an AI-powered social listening and reply automation tool for founders, marketers, and SaaS teams that want to be recommended in relevant Reddit and X conversations. The platform monitors social channels around the clock, finds posts where people are asking for solutions like yours, and helps publish authentic replies that drive qualified traffic back to your product. Instead of manually searching forums, writing outreach messages, and tracking opportunities across multiple communities, Replymer packages the workflow into an autopilot growth system. It is especially useful for early-stage products, agencies, and indie hackers looking for organic demand capture, competitor monitoring, and conversation-based lead generation without relying only on paid ads.

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Pinecone Nexus
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Pinecone Nexus is a knowledge engine for AI agents that prepares reusable context before runtime so agents can spend less compute rediscovering the same information. It is designed to compile organizational knowledge into agent-ready artifacts, improving retrieval, grounding, and task execution across complex workflows. Developers, AI platform teams, and enterprises building autonomous assistants can use it to reduce latency, lower token costs, and make agent behavior more consistent. Nexus fits especially well for teams already using vector search, retrieval-augmented generation, or large internal knowledge bases. Its differentiator is the compilation-stage approach: instead of asking every agent to search from zero, it creates structured knowledge infrastructure that agents can reuse.

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OpenSeek
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OpenSeek is an open-source terminal UI coding agent with multi-provider model routing, MCP support, language-server integration, and multiple work modes such as Plan, Agent, and YOLO. It is built for developers who want a local, keyboard-driven coding assistant rather than a closed IDE-only experience. The tool helps users plan changes, run agentic edits, connect external tools through MCP, and route work across different model providers depending on the task. OpenSeek is relevant to Smartoolbox visitors because coding agents are quickly becoming programmable environments, not just chat sidebars. Its recent GitHub traction and clear repository positioning make it a practical new option for developers comparing local agentic coding tools.

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VS Code Agents
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VS Code Agents brings multi-agent development workflows into Microsoft’s popular code editor and web-based VS Code environment. It helps developers delegate coding tasks, work across projects, and use agentic assistance while staying close to files, repositories, terminals, and existing editor extensions. The workflow is useful for software engineers, technical founders, and teams that want AI coding support without switching away from VS Code. It can support browser and mobile-friendly review loops through vscode.dev while preserving the familiar editor experience. What makes VS Code Agents notable is its integration point: agent workflows sit inside one of the largest developer ecosystems, making adoption easier for teams already standardized on Visual Studio Code.

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SGLang
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SGLang is a high-performance serving framework for large language models and vision-language models. It gives developers tools for efficient inference, structured generation, batching, caching, and runtime control when deploying advanced AI systems. Engineering teams can use it to build faster model endpoints, optimize serving costs, and experiment with complex agent or multi-modal workloads. SGLang is best for AI infrastructure engineers, research labs, and product teams running their own model-serving stack. What makes it stand out is its focus on production-grade LLM serving performance while still giving developers a programmable interface for sophisticated generation workflows, from research prototypes to scalable application backends.

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Gcontext
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Gcontext is an open-source context management system for developers building AI agents that need reliable, inspectable working memory. Instead of hiding context in a black-box memory layer, it organizes project knowledge as a tree of llms.txt files, markdown notes, integration docs, task records, and runbooks that agents can navigate deliberately. Teams can use it to steer Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, or similar agents through support tasks, internal systems, and long-running work without repeatedly pasting the same instructions. It is notable now because it appeared on Show HN with a concrete support-agent workflow and has a dedicated homepage plus GitHub and PyPI package, making it more than a one-off demo.

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GoodSender
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GoodSender is a free email API designed for indie makers and AI agents that need to send transactional and marketing emails programmatically. It provides a straightforward REST API for sending emails without the complexity of enterprise email platforms. Targeted at solo developers, startups, and AI agent workflows that need reliable email delivery as part of their automation pipelines. The service offers a free tier for getting started, with pricing for higher volumes. Built for the growing ecosystem of AI-powered applications that need to trigger email notifications, send user communications, or integrate email into agent-driven workflows without managing SMTP infrastructure.

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AutoTuneLLM
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AutoTuneLLM is an open-source performance wrapper for local LLM usage, focused on making Ollama-style workloads faster and lighter on a user’s own device. The official homepage says it can free hundreds of megabytes of RAM per request and reduce response time as a drop-in wrapper with a simple pip install and no configuration. It is built for developers, local-AI hobbyists, and teams running open models on laptops, workstations, or homelab servers who want better throughput without moving workloads to a hosted API. The Show HN result framed it as making local LLMs faster and more reliable by optimizing for the device. For Smartoolbox, AutoTuneLLM fits the developer tooling category around local inference, model operations, and practical performance tuning.

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WUPHF
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WUPHF is a collaborative office of AI employees with a shared knowledge base, built for users who want multiple agents to work together without constantly losing context. The product positions agents as teammates that can build and maintain their own memory while supporting Claude Code, Codex, OpenClaw, and local LLMs through OpenCode. It is useful for founders, operators, and technical teams exploring persistent AI workspaces rather than single-turn chatbots. The core workflow is delegating tasks to AI employees that coordinate around a shared brain, preserving context across work sessions. It stands out now because multi-agent systems are shifting from demos into practical task management, memory, and coding-assistant workflows.

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AgentTransfer
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AgentTransfer is an open-source file-transfer system designed for AI agents rather than human chat. Every agent can get an email-style address, folder, inbox, API key, and signed activity log, then send files up to 5 GB through expiring, sha256-verified HTTPS links instead of stuffing bytes into a model context window. It includes a local MCP bridge for tools like Codex, Cursor, OpenClaw, and other MCP runtimes, plus a hosted streamable HTTP endpoint for remote-only agents. Developers can use it for multi-agent handoffs, artifact exchange, agent directories, shared spaces, and auditable receipts. It is notable now because as agents coordinate more work, moving large files safely and verifiably becomes infrastructure, not a UI nicety.

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Composio
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Composio is a tool integration platform for AI agents that provides pre-built, authenticated connections to hundreds of external tools and APIs. Rather than requiring developers to write custom integrations for every service their agent needs to access, Composio offers a unified SDK with ready-made connectors for popular tools like GitHub, Slack, Notion, Gmail, and many more. Featured in the context of Slashspace's agentic canvas integration in June 2026, Composio targets developers building AI agents that need to interact with multiple external services reliably. The platform handles authentication, rate limiting, and API changes so agent builders can focus on workflow logic rather than integration plumbing. With the explosion of MCP servers and agent tools, Composio positions itself as the middleware layer that makes agent-tool integration scalable and maintainable.

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DenchClaw
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DenchClaw is a local-first AI CRM and workflow automation tool that runs on your own machine, giving founders and operators a way to manage contacts, enrich leads, and automate outreach without relying on a typical cloud CRM stack. Built on OpenClaw, the product emphasizes privacy, local hosting, and agentic workflows, letting users chat with their database, coordinate relationship data, and build lightweight automations around pipeline work. That positioning makes it interesting for bootstrappers, consultants, and creator-led businesses that want CRM functionality with more flexibility and less SaaS overhead. DenchClaw stands out because it combines AI-assisted CRM tasks with self-hosted control, which is still uncommon in this category. For users who want CRM plus automation without surrendering all of their data to another hosted platform, it offers a differentiated option.

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MemPalace
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MemPalace is an open-source local memory system for AI agents that stores conversation history verbatim and retrieves it through semantic search. Instead of summarizing away details or sending memories to a hosted service, it organizes people, projects, topics and original content into a structured palace-style index backed by pluggable storage such as ChromaDB. Developers can use it to give Claude-style assistants, local agents or custom workflows persistent recall while keeping data on their own machine. It is especially relevant for builders frustrated by agent amnesia, context loss and opaque cloud memory products. MemPalace is notable now because it is a fresh, high-traction release with benchmarks, PyPI packaging and clear warnings about official sources.

Airbyte Agents Context Store is a data context layer that keeps business information continuously refreshed and searchable for AI agents. It helps agents retrieve relevant company data without repeatedly calling many disconnected tools, reducing latency, token use, and brittle integration logic. Teams can use it to power support agents, sales assistants, internal copilots, analytics workflows, and agentic automation that depends on up-to-date operational data. It is built for AI engineers, data teams, and businesses that already move data through Airbyte. Its differentiator is turning sync infrastructure into agent-ready context, making enterprise agents faster, cheaper, and easier to govern.

Continuum by ShyftLabs is an open-source runtime for building, running and deploying production AI agents. The README describes a stack with multi-LLM routing, persistent memory, MCP-native tools, durable workflows and observability, aimed at builders who need agent systems that can be shipped rather than only demoed. It is useful for engineering teams creating internal assistants, automated business workflows or agent products that require memory, tool orchestration and reliability under one framework. The repository is recent, documented, Apache-2.0 licensed and paired with dedicated docs, making it a credible developer listing for Smartoolbox visitors comparing agent frameworks and runtimes in the fast-moving MCP/agent infrastructure category.

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Operator23
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Operator23 is a plain-English automation platform for building agents that test workflows in a sandbox, deploy only after approval, and recover automatically when steps break. The homepage emphasizes safe and reliable agents, more than 900 integrations, sandbox runs, human approval, and self-maintaining automations. It is aimed at operations teams, founders, marketers, and builders who want workflow automation without hand-coding every integration or babysitting brittle scripts. Operator23 is notable now because many AI automation tools can draft a workflow, but production users need verification, rollback, and repair behavior before trusting agents with recurring work. Its fresh Show HN listing and substantial official site make it a strong productivity and agent-automation candidate for Smartoolbox.

Harmonic Security Usage Explorer is an AI usage analytics product that helps organizations understand how employees interact with AI tools. It classifies prompts, detects risky behavior, tracks spend, and gives security or IT teams visibility into which AI services are being used across the business. The product is useful for companies that want to enable AI adoption without losing control over sensitive data, compliance exposure, or unmanaged tool sprawl. Teams can use it to identify high-value workflows, risky departments, policy gaps, and opportunities for safer rollout. Its unique angle is combining AI governance with practical usage intelligence, so leaders can see both productivity signals and security risk in one place.

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Cordium
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Cordium is an open-source sandbox platform for developers, platform teams, and AI-agent builders who need safe execution environments with real infrastructure access. Built on Kubernetes and Octelium, it creates isolated, reproducible workspaces reachable through browser terminals, SSH, a CLI, and gRPC APIs. The notable piece is secretless access: each sandbox receives an identity rather than copied API keys, SSH keys, kubeconfigs, or database passwords. That makes it useful for coding agents, CI workloads, remote development, and internal automation that must touch private systems without leaking long-lived credentials. It is fresh from a Show HN launch and has enough documentation to stand as a developer infrastructure tool, not just a demo repository.

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Thunderbolt
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Thunderbolt is an open-source AI client for organizations and power users who want chat, search, research, automation, and cross-device workflows without giving up control of their infrastructure. It supports self-hosted and open deployment models, making it useful for teams that need stronger privacy, customization, and operational ownership than typical hosted AI apps provide. Users can access a unified interface across web, desktop, and mobile while connecting the product to their own systems and preferred models. That makes Thunderbolt a strong fit for enterprises, technical teams, and privacy-conscious users building practical AI workflows across devices. What makes it stand out is its combination of extensibility, cross-platform reach, and sovereign AI positioning, giving users a more controllable alternative to closed assistant products.

Meta Business AI Agent is an AI assistant for businesses using WhatsApp, Instagram, and Messenger. It can answer customer questions, support sales conversations, book appointments, and help companies manage common customer interactions across Meta’s messaging channels. The agent is aimed at small businesses, ecommerce teams, service providers, and brands that depend on social messaging for leads and support. Instead of requiring a separate chatbot destination, it works where customers already contact the business, reducing friction and improving response speed. Its biggest differentiator is native access to Meta’s high-volume communication platforms, making AI customer assistance available inside familiar chat channels.

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Muze AI
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Muze AI is an autonomous advertising platform built for ecommerce brands that want to run Meta and Google campaigns with far less manual work. Instead of acting like another reporting dashboard, it handles campaign creation, launch, optimization, audience targeting, creative testing, budget control, and ongoing performance analysis from one interface. The product is positioned as an AI CMO that can connect to a store and ad accounts, generate image and video ads, detect fatigue, pause underperformers, and scale winning creatives automatically. For teams that spend heavily on paid acquisition but do not want a large in-house media buying operation, Muze AI offers a practical way to automate performance marketing workflows end to end.

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TokenTracker
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TokenTracker is a local-first usage dashboard for AI coding tools and agent CLIs. It collects token counts from Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Gemini, Kiro, OpenCode, OpenClaw, Every Code, Hermes, GitHub Copilot, Kimi Code, CodeBuddy and other tools, then shows cost trends in a web dashboard, native macOS menu bar app and widgets. Setup is designed to be zero-config through an npm command, with no cloud account or API key required for tracking. It is useful for developers who run multiple AI assistants and need to understand where budget is going. It is notable now because it is a new GitHub project with active releases, public package links and strong early interest.

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Interbase
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Interbase is an open-source CLI agent for serious local and remote work. It gives developers broad provider and model choice, reusable prompt aliases, long-running goals, plugin-style packages, and encrypted remote access from trusted devices. Instead of locking a workflow into one hosted assistant, Interbase is designed as a command-line control surface where users can switch among many providers and thousands of cataloged models, keep goals alive across sessions, and continue steering work from mobile or another device. That makes it relevant for power users who already live in terminal-based AI coding and automation tools but want more portability and provider independence. Its June Show HN appearance, active GitHub repository, and official Interbase site make it a fresh agent-workflow candidate for Smartoolbox.

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Helicone
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Helicone is an open-source LLM observability platform for monitoring, evaluating, and optimizing AI API usage. It helps developers track requests, latency, cost, errors, user behavior, and prompt performance across model providers with minimal integration work. Teams can use Helicone to debug production issues, compare prompt versions, control spending, cache responses, and understand which users or workflows drive the most model activity. The tool is best for startups, AI engineers, and product teams that need practical visibility into LLM systems without building analytics infrastructure from scratch. Helicone stands out because it is developer-friendly, transparent, and focused on the operational details that matter once an AI feature has real traffic.

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ProofShot
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ProofShot is an open-source verification tool for AI coding workflows that gives agents a way to prove what they built in the browser. It wraps your local dev server, launches a browser session, records video, captures screenshots, logs actions, and collects console or server errors into a single reviewable proof bundle. The output is designed for human verification, with an interactive timeline, synchronized playback, and pull-request-ready artifacts that make it easier to inspect UI work without replaying everything manually. For teams using coding agents to ship front-end changes, ProofShot adds a practical trust layer between autonomous execution and human approval. It is especially useful for validating interface changes, regression checks, and demonstrating what an agent actually did step by step.

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Whale
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Whale is an open-source DeepSeek-focused terminal coding agent for macOS and Linux. It can read and modify code, run shell commands, use MCP servers, reuse skills and support ask, plan and exec-style workflows from a local TUI or CLI. The project emphasizes DeepSeek API economics and prefix-cache-friendly long sessions, positioning itself as a cheaper local coding agent rather than a broad multi-model wrapper. It is useful for developers who like Claude Code-style terminal workflows but want an agent optimized around DeepSeek’s pricing and caching behavior. It is notable now because cost-aware coding agents are becoming more important as teams run agents for longer stretches.

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ChubbySkills
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ChubbySkills is an open-source collection of agent skills for capturing Chinese-language content from the feeds where people actually discover it. The GitHub README says it can route Douyin, Bilibili, Xiaohongshu, WeChat public-account posts, X, podcasts, YouTube, and related media into clean Markdown, transcripts, saved images, and an Obsidian-ready personal knowledge base. It also includes a knowledge-base MCP server so Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, OpenClaw, Hermes, or other compatible agents can query the collected material later. The project is useful for creators, researchers, and operators who want a second brain fed by short video, social posts, and audio, not just webpages. It surfaced through fresh GitHub MCP searches and has enough documentation to list as a practical tool.

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Odessia
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Odessia is an AI travel agent that helps users plan and book trips through one conversational interface. It can generate personalized itineraries, compare travel options, surface flights and hotels, and guide decisions around budget, style, timing, and availability. Travelers can use it to move from vague trip ideas to concrete plans without bouncing between booking sites, spreadsheets, and generic recommendation lists. It is useful for frequent travelers, families, founders, and anyone who wants a more guided planning experience. Odessia’s distinct promise is combining planning and booking in a single AI-led workflow, aiming to act more like a private travel advisor than a static itinerary generator.

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UBTECH Walker E
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UBTECH Walker E is a humanoid robot platform for real-world service, industrial, and demonstration workflows. It combines bipedal movement, perception hardware, dexterous manipulation, and AI control systems so teams can test how humanoid robots perform around people and physical environments. The Walker line is aimed at robotics researchers, automation teams, universities, and enterprises evaluating embodied AI for reception, inspection, education, and light operational tasks. Its value is not a single chatbot feature but a full robot system with integrated mobility, sensing, and interaction capabilities, making it useful for organizations that want to prototype human-scale automation rather than only simulate agents in software.

Swiggy Builders Club MCP APIs give developers access to Swiggy’s AI commerce stack through Model Context Protocol interfaces. The platform lets agents and apps connect to food ordering, grocery, restaurant reservation, and other consumer-commerce actions using structured APIs built for AI workflows. It is aimed at developers, enterprises, and agent builders who want real-world commerce capabilities inside assistants or automation products. What makes Builders Club notable is its focus on operational commerce rather than demos: agents can work with Swiggy’s live service categories and user-facing commerce primitives. For teams building assistant experiences in India, it offers a practical route to connect conversational AI with transactions and local consumer services.

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Agentic Mainnet
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Agentic Mainnet is Zeko Labs' infrastructure layer for launching autonomous AI agents with private execution, verifiable computation, coordination, and micropayments. The platform is designed to help builders create agent workflows that can act across decentralized systems while keeping sensitive operations private and auditable. Developers can use it for agent coordination, on-chain automation, verifiable task execution, and payment-enabled AI services. It is best suited for teams building crypto-native agents, autonomous applications, and privacy-aware AI infrastructure. What makes Agentic Mainnet distinctive is its focus on combining agent orchestration with zero-knowledge verification and micropayment rails, giving AI agents a more trustworthy foundation for operating in open networks.

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allman
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allman is a local-first LinkedIn inbox tool that turns direct messages into an AI-ready command-line and terminal UI workflow. It is built for power users, founders, recruiters, sales operators, and agent builders who want to work with LinkedIn conversations without living inside the web app. The product caches inbox data locally, exposes messages through CLI/TUI interfaces, and positions the data so agents can search, summarize, draft, or automate follow-up with more control. Its value is not another social dashboard; it is a bridge between a high-signal professional inbox and programmable workflows. The recent Show HN launch makes it relevant because agentic outreach and personal CRM automation increasingly need local, inspectable data layers.

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SlopIt
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SlopIt is a deliberately simple publishing CMS for AI agents: an agent writes a post, calls the service, and SlopIt publishes it to a hosted blog. The homepage describes it as the publish button for agents, with an API key, blog URL, self-hosting option, and minimal configuration. It is useful for builders who want autonomous agents to ship changelogs, experiment logs, project updates, or lightweight blogs without integrating a full CMS. The product is funny and opinionated, but the underlying workflow is real: agent-generated content often gets stuck in local files or chat transcripts, and SlopIt turns that into a shareable page quickly. The Show HN launch makes it fresh, while the official homepage is clear enough for a Smartoolbox listing.

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Council
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Council is an open-source CLI for comparing multiple AI coding agents on the same prompt. It runs Codex, Claude, and Gemini in parallel, synthesizes a combined answer, and highlights disagreements so developers can see where models converge or diverge before acting on advice. The tool is useful for engineers, technical leads, and AI-heavy teams that want a lightweight second-opinion workflow without manually copying prompts between clients. Council is notable now because coding agents have become good enough that the limiting factor is often judgment: knowing which suggestion to trust. Its Show HN launch and official homepage frame it as a practical way to turn model diversity into safer decisions rather than just another chat interface.

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Beacon
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Beacon by Asymptote Labs is an open-source endpoint telemetry layer for local AI agent activity. It runs on developer machines, captures activity from agent harnesses such as Claude Code, Codex CLI, OpenCode, Factory Droid, Claude Cowork, and Cursor, then normalizes events for local inspection or forwarding into SIEM tools like Wazuh, Elastic, and Splunk HEC. The tool is built for security, IT, and engineering teams that need visibility into what coding agents are doing on endpoints without replacing their existing security pipeline. Beacon is timely because agentic coding is becoming operationally real, and organizations need auditability, retention, and local-first monitoring rather than blind trust in autonomous tools.

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Harness Anything
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Harness Anything is a CLI tool that gives AI agents programmatic control over WPS Office applications through COM automation on Windows. It exposes Writer, Calc, and Impress capabilities as structured, agent-callable tools so coding agents can create spreadsheets, format documents, generate presentations, and manipulate office files without manual interaction. The tool targets developers, automation engineers, and teams using WPS Office who want AI agents to handle document workflows as part of larger automated pipelines. It solves the gap between AI coding agents and desktop productivity software that most agent frameworks ignore. With 249 GitHub stars, MIT licensing, and trending visibility, Harness Anything represents the expanding category of tools that bridge autonomous AI agents with legacy desktop applications through structured automation interfaces.

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Zoom Agent Architect
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Zoom Agent Architect is an enterprise tool for designing AI voice agents from natural language prompts and operational requirements. It helps customer-experience teams turn support intents, call flows, escalation rules, and business logic into automated voice-agent experiences without starting from a blank technical canvas. Teams can use it to prototype inbound support agents, sales-assist flows, scheduling assistants, and service-resolution workflows that connect with broader Zoom customer engagement products. It is built for enterprises that need governance, analytics, and repeatable deployment rather than one-off voice demos. Its differentiator is the combination of conversational agent creation with Zoom's communication infrastructure, making AI voice automation easier to manage inside existing contact-center workflows.

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InsightFinder
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InsightFinder is an AI observability and reliability platform that helps teams detect, diagnose, and prevent failures across AI agents, machine learning systems, and modern application infrastructure. It combines anomaly detection, root cause analysis, predictive monitoring, and workflow-aware alerts so engineering and operations teams can understand where complex systems break before those issues become outages or degraded user experiences. The platform is built for enterprises running LLM apps, agentic workflows, cloud services, and distributed systems that need deeper visibility than standard dashboards alone can provide. What makes InsightFinder stand out is its focus on closed feedback loops and AI-driven analysis, giving teams a practical way to improve reliability across both traditional IT environments and newer AI-native production systems.

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Harvey
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Harvey is an applied AI platform for legal and professional services workflows. It helps law firms and enterprise legal teams draft, analyze, research, and manage complex knowledge work with AI assistance. Users can apply it to document review, matter analysis, legal research, and structured workflows that require domain context and careful output review. Harvey is built for organizations that need specialized AI rather than a generic assistant, with an emphasis on professional-grade use cases where accuracy, security, and workflow fit matter. It is most relevant for teams that want AI embedded into serious legal work rather than lightweight drafting tools with little domain structure.

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Stagewise
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Stagewise is an open-source agentic IDE for developers who want to connect their own model subscriptions and build software through a dedicated AI coding environment. The repository describes it as an agentic IDE for Z.ai, DeepSeek, Moonshot and similar provider accounts, with multilingual documentation and an active developer-facing setup. It is relevant for builders who prefer a transparent IDE layer over closed coding-agent products, especially when they already pay for model access elsewhere. Stagewise fits Smartoolbox’s code-assistant and vibe-coding audience because it combines editor workflow, agent orchestration, and model flexibility in one project. It is notable now because it launched on Show HN as a fresh coding-agent tool and has a clear official repository with usable documentation.

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Paseo
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Paseo is an open-source interface for running coding agents from a phone, desktop app, or command line while keeping work organized across providers such as Claude Code, Codex, Copilot, Gemini, OpenCode and Pi. It is for developers and teams who increasingly delegate implementation tasks to multiple agents and need a practical control surface for starting sessions, monitoring progress, and reviewing work away from the IDE. The project’s GitHub repository shows strong adoption, active development, and a dedicated homepage at paseo.sh. Paseo is notable now because its Show HN launch surfaced as AI coding teams are moving from one chat window to fleets of asynchronous agents that need orchestration across devices.

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Petri
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Petri is an open-source alignment testing toolkit for evaluating how AI systems behave in controlled interaction scenarios. It helps researchers design experiments, run model probes, and inspect transcripts for risky, deceptive, or policy-relevant behavior patterns. Teams can use it to compare models, document evaluation methods, and reproduce alignment findings without building custom harnesses from scratch. The project is best suited for AI safety researchers, model evaluation teams, and technical policy groups that need a practical framework for stress-testing frontier systems. Its value is the combination of structured experiments, inspectable outputs, and community-maintained tooling around real alignment workflows, making evaluations easier to share, audit, and improve over time.

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Agentgraphed
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Agentgraphed is a local-first analytics dashboard for AI coding sessions, focused on showing what developers built with Claude Code and Codex CLI. It helps users search history, inspect activity, and understand patterns across agent-assisted development work without sending that session data to another cloud service. The project is useful for developers, engineering leads, and AI-power users who want visibility into how much work their coding agents perform, where time goes, and what artifacts were produced. It is notable now because fresh Show HN attention shows the emerging need for observability around coding agents: once agents become daily tools, teams need history, analytics, and review surfaces around the work they generate.

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Hermes Agent
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Hermes Agent is an AI agent system focused on real task execution across tools, coding workflows, messaging surfaces, and operational environments. Instead of being limited to text conversation, it is built to reason through multi-step work, call tools, manage context, and help users complete practical tasks with less manual coordination. Its positioning spans coding, productivity, and personal-agent use cases, which makes it relevant for people who want one assistant to bridge research, automation, development, and day-to-day digital work. That wider surface area is what makes Hermes Agent interesting: it aims to be operational, not just conversational. For users evaluating action-oriented AI systems rather than prompt-only assistants, Hermes Agent deserves a place among the stronger agent platforms now showing real usage in the market.

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Model Studio CLI
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Model Studio CLI is Alibaba Cloud's official command-line interface for the Model Studio platform, designed specifically for AI agent frameworks. It exposes Qwen models, web search, multimodal capabilities, and workflow orchestration as structured tool calls that developers can integrate into agent-based coding and automation workflows. The CLI supports direct model invocation, data processing pipelines, and tool-orchestrated multi-step tasks from the terminal. It targets developers building on Alibaba Cloud's AI infrastructure who want a CLI-first integration path for agent development rather than relying solely on web dashboards or REST APIs. With 153 GitHub stars, Apache-2.0 licensing, and active development through June 2026, Model Studio CLI represents the growing ecosystem of cloud-provider CLI tools that serve as first-class interfaces for agentic AI development.

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FriendliAI
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FriendliAI is an inference platform for serving large language models and agent workloads with production-grade speed, scaling, and reliability. It provides cloud infrastructure for deploying open-weight and custom AI models, handling high-throughput inference, and supporting applications that need responsive model APIs. AI teams can use FriendliAI to run chatbots, agent backends, copilots, and enterprise AI services without building all serving infrastructure in house. It is aimed at developers, platform teams, and companies moving from experiments to real user traffic. FriendliAI stands out by focusing on the performance layer for AI products: fast model serving, operational reliability, and infrastructure designed for workloads where latency and uptime directly affect product quality.

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Kilo Code
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Kilo Code is an AI coding agent for Visual Studio Code that helps developers work directly inside their editor with more autonomy than a basic autocomplete tool. It is positioned as an agentic coding assistant that can support implementation, iteration, and development workflows where context and multi-step reasoning matter. Because it lives inside VS Code, Kilo Code is aimed at developers who want AI help embedded in the place where real coding happens instead of switching between browser chats and local files. That makes it useful for writing code, understanding codebases, speeding up repetitive work, and keeping momentum high while building. For engineers who want a stronger in-editor AI development companion, Kilo Code is a notable coding assistant worth including in a practical tools directory.

AI Gateway by Arnab758 is an open-source reverse proxy for reducing LLM API costs through semantic caching. It sits between an application and providers such as OpenAI or Groq, detects semantically similar repeat questions, and returns cached responses instead of sending every request to the model provider. The README frames the value for AI app builders with recurring support, education or knowledge-base questions, claiming potential 40–70% API bill reductions with no application-code changes beyond routing through the proxy. It is notable as a lightweight developer tool discovered through a fresh Show HN LLM launch and verified via the official GitHub repository and live-demo links. It should not be confused with existing vendor products like Vercel AI Gateway.

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Cotera
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Cotera is an AI agent platform for teams that want automation beyond simple rule-based workflows. The product lets users create agents in plain English, connect them to business tools, and deploy them to monitor, analyze, and act on operational tasks without requiring heavy engineering work. Its positioning is strong for customer operations, internal workflows, and other repetitive work where people usually bounce between chatbots, dashboards, and manual playbooks. Cotera emphasizes a human-friendly editor, integrated tools, and a copilot-style setup process that helps non-technical teams build usable agents faster. For companies exploring AI agents in production, it looks like a practical middle ground between no-code simplicity and the control needed for real business workflows that must run reliably over time.

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Anything Analyzer
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Anything Analyzer is an open-source protocol analysis toolkit that combines browser capture, MITM proxying, JavaScript hooks, fingerprint spoofing and AI-assisted analysis for developers and security researchers. It can capture traffic from websites, desktop apps, terminal commands, scripts and mobile or IoT clients, then generate protocol reverse-engineering, security-audit and encryption-analysis reports from the collected session. The tool is useful for engineers debugging APIs, analyzing OAuth flows, auditing client behavior or giving AI agents better visibility into complex network interactions. It goes beyond standard browser DevTools by unifying many traffic sources and adding MCP-style agent integration. Anything Analyzer is notable now because AI-assisted reverse engineering is becoming a practical workflow rather than a purely manual packet-inspection task.

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Musts
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Musts is an open-source validation-loop tool for AI coding agents that helps stop the classic “done” claim before tests, checks, or required proof have actually passed. It is aimed at developers using Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, OpenCode, and similar agents in real repositories where unattended changes can drift away from acceptance criteria. The project gives agents explicit must-pass constraints and validation steps, turning completion into something that can be checked rather than trusted from a chat response. It is early, but the workflow problem is real: coding agents are most useful when they can iterate until objective checks pass. A fresh Show HN launch and official GitHub repository make it a good niche listing for agentic development quality control.

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NormaCore
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NormaCore is an open-source physical-operations platform for robotics, distributed sensors and embodied AI development. The official repository packages software, hardware, SDKs and data tooling around a unified API for managing physical systems, including ElRobot, a fully 3D-printed 7+1 DoF robotic arm for imitation learning; a modular parallel-jaw gripper; Station, a real-time robotics platform for data collection, inference and control; SmolVLA fine-tuning support; and Gremlin protobuf SDKs for Go and Python. It is useful for robotics researchers, makers, hardware startups and AI builders who need open infrastructure for real-world control rather than only simulation. The X launch artifact led to the official norma-core/norma-core repository, which verifies 600+ stars, MIT licensing, docs, releases and active community links.

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Smithy AI
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Smithy AI is an orchestrator for AI-assisted software development that runs Claude Code sessions from an issue tracker inside isolated Docker containers. The official README describes planning and building phases, optional project-specific knowledge bases, and automated pull-request review against established best practices. It is built for engineering teams that want agents to work through Jira, GitLab, or Forgejo workflows instead of manually launching one-off coding sessions. Smithy AI matters now because agentic coding is moving from solo terminal experiments into team software-delivery processes where isolation, review, and issue lifecycle integration are essential. The project is still labeled work in progress, but its Show HN listing, official repository, and concrete architecture make it a useful early-stage agent orchestration listing.

Cortex Knowledge Vault is an agent-native knowledge operating system built on Markdown. It gives humans and AI agents a shared vault backed by a typed knowledge graph, full-text search, an LLM-powered compiler, and MCP access so agents can read, write, link, search, and compile knowledge without requiring a database. The project is for teams experimenting with long-lived agent memory, documentation automation, and structured knowledge workflows that remain portable in plain files. It is notable now because its recent Show HN launch reflects a strong direction in agent tooling: agents need durable, searchable, editable knowledge substrates that both people and tools can safely operate on.

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OpenBrief
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OpenBrief is an open-source, local-first video downloader and AI summarizer that runs entirely on the user's machine. It is built for researchers, analysts, journalists, students, and content teams who need to extract structured insights from video content without uploading it to a remote service. The tool downloads videos from supported platforms, transcribes them locally, and generates AI-powered summaries, chapter breakdowns, and searchable transcripts. Because it is local-first, it avoids privacy concerns and cloud processing fees while still leveraging modern transcription and summarization models. OpenBrief gained significant traction on Hacker News with 88 points and 17 comments, and the GitHub repository has already accumulated 259 stars. It fills a clear gap for privacy-conscious video intelligence workflows.

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Devin Desktop
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Devin Desktop is a desktop workspace for coordinating AI software-engineering agents across local and cloud development tasks. It helps developers plan work, delegate implementation, review agent output, and keep coding workflows connected without constantly switching between editors, terminals, and web dashboards. Teams can use it to manage multiple agent sessions, supervise longer-running software tasks, and bring autonomous coding work closer to the normal development environment. It is best suited for engineering teams, startup builders, and technical operators already experimenting with AI coding agents. Devin Desktop stands out because it is built around multi-agent software delivery rather than single-chat code suggestions, giving users a control surface for orchestrating agent fleets while preserving human review and shipping discipline.

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Dataiku
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Dataiku is an enterprise AI and data platform for building, governing, and operating analytics, machine learning, and generative AI workflows. It helps data teams connect sources, prepare data, create models, deploy applications, and monitor AI projects with governance controls for business users and technical teams. Common use cases include predictive analytics, internal AI assistants, decision automation, risk management, and organization-wide data science collaboration. Dataiku is best suited for larger companies that need repeatable AI delivery rather than isolated experiments. Its edge is the combination of visual workflows, code-based extensibility, enterprise governance, and a mature partner ecosystem around AI readiness and production deployment.

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Ota
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Ota is an open repo-readiness layer for making software repositories runnable and trustworthy for humans, CI, containers, multi-repo workspaces, and AI agents. It gives each repo an explicit operational contract for diagnosis, setup, execution, and safe automation, with a doctor-first workflow: `ota doctor` finds what is missing, `ota up` prepares the repo, and `ota run` executes named tasks from the contract. The tool helps developers, maintainers, platform teams, and agent builders reduce README drift, local/CI mismatch, and brittle automation. Ota surfaced on Show HN as readiness infrastructure for software repos, and the official GitHub repository verifies the product identity, docs, releases, and agent-oriented positioning.

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Statey
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Statey is a permanent, reshapeable database shared across AI chats through MCP. Instead of copying the same context into Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor or other clients, users and agents can read and write the same structured records from every compatible chat environment. That makes it useful for builders, analysts, operators and power users who need persistent project facts, task state, CRM-like records, or evolving research data without maintaining a separate app UI. It appeared on Show HN as “the database your AI shares across every chat,” and the official homepage confirms a no-app, no-UI data layer designed for AI collaboration. Statey is notable now because persistent structured state is becoming a core missing primitive for multi-agent and multi-chat workflows.

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Ardot
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Ardot is Tencent’s AI-native design agent for turning prompts, images, and product ideas into UI and UX design work. It supports prompt-to-design, image-to-design, design iteration, and design-to-code handoff, with workflow integrations through MCP and common coding environments. Product teams, designers, frontend developers, and founders can use it to move from concept to interface draft faster while keeping design and implementation closer together. Its strongest angle is the combination of visual design generation with agent-style workflow plumbing, so it is not just a canvas demo but a bridge between design systems, code assistants, and IDE-based product building.

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Moduna
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Moduna is a decision-intelligence dashboard for production AI agents, described by its makers as Mixpanel for AI agents. It analyzes real user conversations to surface missed intents, blind spots, and new business opportunities, giving product teams a clearer roadmap for what an agent should handle next. The workflow is aimed at companies with customer-facing agents that already receive production traffic but lack a structured way to understand where those agents fail or what users repeatedly ask for. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch with a live product site, explicit onboarding and demo calls to action, and a clear niche between analytics, agent observability, and product discovery.

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THR
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THR is a small local CLI that gives coding agents semantic memory without sending private context to a hosted service. The README describes explicit memory saving, recall by meaning or exact text, stable JSON output, offline semantic search, and installable skills for Codex, OpenCode, and Claude Code. It is aimed at developers who repeatedly teach agents project rules, preferences, and lessons, then lose that context between sessions. THR fits the growing class of local agent-memory utilities because it is simple enough for terminal workflows while still designed for machine-readable agent integration. It is notable now because coding agents are becoming persistent collaborators, but many teams want memory to stay local, auditable, and easy to reset.

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MLX Code
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MLX Code is a lightweight local coding agent for Mac built on Apple's MLX framework. It is aimed at developers who want an understandable, hackable alternative to cloud-hosted coding agents, with fast local inference, prompt caching, and transparent tool calling. Instead of hiding the agent loop behind a subscription product, the project exposes the moving parts so users can inspect prompts, modify behavior, and keep control of their development environment. It is especially relevant for Mac users experimenting with local LLM coding workflows, privacy-conscious developers, and builders who want a small agent they can break and repair themselves. Its Show HN launch makes it a timely addition to the local-first AI coding trend.

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Sylph
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Sylph is an open-source company-brain repository pattern from nao Labs for running a startup or team with AI agents, shared skills, and self-improving context. Instead of scattering company memory across chats, docs, and prompts, Sylph organizes domain knowledge, reusable skills, agent roles, and operating loops in a repo that Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, and other coding agents can read. It is useful for founders, operators, and small teams that want AI employees to work from the same facts, processes, and style rules rather than starting cold every session. The fresh Show HN launch is notable because it treats company context as infrastructure: versioned, reviewable, agent-agnostic, and continuously improved by the work itself.

Browser Use cloud browsers provide hosted browser infrastructure for AI agents that need to navigate websites, interact with pages, and complete online workflows. The service gives developers isolated browser sessions optimized for fast startup, lower cost, and reliable automation at scale. It is built for agent builders, automation teams, QA engineers, and AI products that need web access without maintaining their own browser fleet. The key differentiator is infrastructure designed specifically for agentic browsing, including lightweight isolation and performance improvements that make repeated web tasks cheaper and easier to run. Teams can use it to power research agents, form-filling workflows, testing, and browser-based operations.

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Komi-learn
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Komi-learn provides continuous memory and self-improvement for AI coding agents like Claude Code and Codex. It automatically watches coding sessions, distills durable lessons in the background — your coding style, preferred stack, fixes that worked — and loads relevant memories at the start of each new session. No manual commands or slash triggers needed. Inspired by Hermes Agent's memory approach but generalized across multiple hosts, it includes an optional community pool for sharing learnings. Installable via pip with a one-command setup, it brings persistent agent memory to any coding workflow. Currently on the Hacker News front page with strong developer interest, Komi-learn addresses the critical pain point of AI agents losing context between sessions.

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Libretto
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Libretto is an AI toolkit for building robust web integrations and making browser automations far more deterministic. It helps teams inspect live pages, understand page structure, reverse-engineer network requests, and turn brittle browser steps into more reliable workflows that agents can actually execute. Instead of relying on fragile click-by-click scripts, Libretto is designed to reduce failures, cut token waste, and give developers a more production-ready path for shipping automations. The platform is especially relevant for teams building agent-powered integrations that need repeatability, debugging support, and maintainability over time. For developers working with complex websites, internal tools, or repetitive browser tasks, Libretto offers a focused way to convert messy web interactions into cleaner, more dependable AI-friendly automation pipelines.

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Graphmind
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Graphmind is a local-first code intelligence layer for Claude Code that gives large repositories persistent memory. It builds an AST-based structural graph of functions, classes and calls, adds semantic search over symbols, stores project decisions and patterns, and exposes the result through CLI, MCP, hooks and a desktop onboarding app. Developers can use it when a coding agent keeps re-reading files, losing architectural context, or burning tokens on broad grep searches. The project is especially useful for teams working across multiple repositories because it can link related codebases and keep conventions available between sessions. Its fresh Show HN launch makes it timely as agentic coding shifts from short prompts to long-running, memory-dependent workflows.

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JDS
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JDS is an open-source skill suite for shaping how AI coding agents, especially GitHub Copilot-style tools, behave inside software projects. It provides structured guidance files and workflows that help agents produce more predictable plans, edits, reviews, and implementation behavior. The tool is for developers and teams who already use AI coding assistants but want stronger conventions than ad hoc prompting in every chat. JDS solves the repeatability problem by packaging reusable agent instructions that can be versioned with a codebase and applied across sessions. Its Show HN appearance is notable because the coding-agent market is shifting from raw model capability toward project-specific operating rules, skills, and guardrails that keep automated changes aligned with engineering standards.

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Cord
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Cord is a Rust-built distributed agent fabric for connecting LLMs, MCP servers, HTTP backends, robots, IoT devices, and other AI services as discoverable nodes. Instead of every agent living behind a separate endpoint or private integration, Cord lets services publish capabilities and be found through natural-language semantic search across machines. It is aimed at developers building multi-device or multi-agent systems that need service discovery without a central registry or manual API handoff. The project is useful for local labs, distributed automation setups, and agent ecosystems where tools should find each other dynamically. It is notable now because it brings networking and discovery primitives to the fast-growing MCP and agent-infrastructure layer.

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Athenic
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Athenic is an AI analytics and automation platform for asking business questions in natural language, producing charts or dashboards, and automating recurring data work across sources such as databases, Salesforce, and advertising platforms. It is built for business teams that need reliable analysis without every stakeholder writing SQL or manually reconciling definitions. Unlike simply attaching Claude to a database, Athenic emphasizes consistent metrics, governed semantics, and repeatable outputs for company workflows. It is notable now because its Show HN launch directly addressed a practical enterprise concern: language models can generate impressive one-off analyses, but businesses need repeatability, shared definitions, and automation before AI data analysis can be trusted operationally.

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Factory
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Factory is an agent-native software development platform that uses AI coding agents called Droids to automate coding, testing, and deployment. The platform helps startups and enterprises build software faster by delegating repetitive development tasks to autonomous agents. Factory Droids can write code, run tests, review changes, and manage deployments across the software lifecycle. The platform integrates with existing development workflows and supports multiple programming languages. Factory is ideal for engineering teams looking to accelerate delivery while maintaining code quality through AI-assisted development.

Slack AI-powered workflows help teams create and automate Slack processes with AI-assisted workflow building. The feature supports turning natural-language ideas into repeatable automations for approvals, notifications, routing, handoffs, and other collaboration tasks inside Slack. It is useful for operations teams, managers, support teams, and internal-tool builders who want lightweight automation without creating a separate app. The key advantage is proximity: AI workflow creation happens where team conversations already live, reducing the friction between discussing a process and turning it into an automated Slack workflow that employees can actually use.

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ThinkWatch
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ThinkWatch is an open-source AI bastion host that centralizes secure access to model APIs and MCP tools. It acts like an enterprise gateway for AI traffic, giving teams a single control plane for authentication, authorization, unified proxying, RBAC, rate limits, audit logs, cost tracking and policy enforcement across OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, Azure OpenAI, self-hosted models and agent tools. The product is built for engineering, security and platform teams that need governance without blocking developer adoption of AI assistants. It solves the growing problem of unmanaged model calls, hidden tool execution and unclear spend. ThinkWatch is notable now because enterprise AI governance is moving from abstract policy into concrete infrastructure that can sit in front of every request.

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picobot
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picobot is a lightweight, self-hosted bot packaged as a single Go binary. It is aimed at developers who want an agent-like automation tool that is simple to deploy, inspect and run on their own infrastructure rather than a heavy hosted platform. The X launch artifact described it as a single-binary AI agent, and the verified GitHub repository confirms the Go-based self-hosted bot positioning. That makes it a good fit for users experimenting with small personal agents, internal bots or low-overhead automation services where operational simplicity matters. picobot is notable now because many agent frameworks are large, cloud-first or dependency-heavy; a compact binary can be easier to run in constrained environments, test locally and adapt for custom workflows.

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happycapy
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happycapy is an agent-native computer that runs in the browser, giving users a secure workspace where AI agents can browse, code, manipulate files, and carry out multi-step tasks instead of stopping at chat responses. The product is designed for people who want AI to do real computer work, with support for Claude Code, large model selection, and sandboxed execution in a cloud-based environment. That makes it useful for developers, operators, and technical teams who want to delegate repeatable workflows, software tasks, or research-heavy jobs to autonomous agents without maintaining their own infrastructure. happycapy stands out by packaging models, compute, and execution into one interface, turning browser-based AI from a conversation layer into a practical workstation for agent-driven productivity and automation.

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Persist
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Persist is an AI sales follow-up agent for cold outreach teams that lose deals because prospects never reply after the first message. The product presents itself as an AI sales agent that keeps following up across accrued channels until a contact responds, turning the repetitive, easy-to-forget part of outbound sales into an automated workflow. It fits founders, agencies and sales teams that already run lead generation but need a persistent assistant to nudge, re-engage and manage replies without manually tracking every thread. The 2026-06-07 Show HN listing makes it a fresh candidate, and the official homepage is live with a clear product identity rather than only a launch post.

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QVAC SDK
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QVAC SDK is Tether’s open-source SDK for running local AI models, including language, speech, and image capabilities, directly on user-controlled devices. It helps developers build privacy-conscious applications that keep inference local instead of relying entirely on hosted APIs. The SDK is useful for builders working on offline assistants, edge AI tools, private productivity apps, embedded workflows, and experiments that need lower dependency on cloud providers. Its recent TurboQuant integration promises substantially more context from the same hardware, making local model workflows more practical. QVAC SDK fits Smartoolbox as a developer-focused AI library for teams exploring on-device and self-sovereign AI experiences.

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Ghost
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Ghost is a Postgres database platform positioned for AI agents, experiments, and fast-moving developer workflows. It helps builders create, fork, and manage databases quickly so agents and applications can test ideas without waiting on heavy infrastructure setup. Developers, AI startups, automation teams, and product engineers can use Ghost for ephemeral databases, branchable state, sandboxed experiments, and prototypes that need real SQL storage. The platform is most useful when an agent or developer workflow needs safe database iteration at high speed. What makes Ghost stand out is its focus on agent-friendly database operations, making data infrastructure feel disposable, repeatable, and easy to reset while still using familiar Postgres foundations.

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WorkWeave Router
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WorkWeave Router is an open-source model router for agentic systems that sends each prompt to an appropriate model in under 50 milliseconds. The GitHub repository describes a drop-in endpoint change for routing prompts across models while reducing LLM cost by 40–70%, which is especially relevant for agent stacks that call models repeatedly for planning, coding, reviewing, browsing or tool use. It is aimed at developers and AI platform teams that want smarter routing without rewriting their application around a single provider. The project surfaced on Show HN as smart model routing directly in Claude, Codex and Cursor, and the official repository plus homepage confirm a concrete developer utility. Shared-host dedupe uses the workweave/router repository path.

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Stainless
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Stainless is an API SDK and MCP server platform that helps software teams turn their APIs into polished developer experiences. It generates typed SDKs, maintains documentation-friendly client libraries, and supports the operational workflow around shipping reliable integrations as APIs evolve. Product and platform teams can use Stainless to reduce SDK maintenance work, keep language clients consistent, and make external APIs easier for developers and agents to adopt. The platform is especially relevant for AI companies, infrastructure vendors, and developer-first SaaS teams that need distribution across many programming languages. What makes Stainless stand out is its focus on SDKs as a distribution layer: it combines generation, updates, and protocol-aware tooling in one workflow instead of treating client libraries as one-off artifacts.

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SocialEcho 2.0
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SocialEcho 2.0 is an AI-powered social media copilot designed for global businesses, cross-border teams, and content creators. It integrates multi-platform account management across 10 social networks (Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X, LinkedIn, Telegram, Pinterest, Reddit, and Threads) with intelligent content generation, bulk publishing, behavioral analytics, and conversion tracking. The platform features a unified AI inbox that consolidates comments, DMs, and @mentions with sentiment-aware auto-replies, custom automation rules, and AI-powered content rewriting per platform. SocialEcho 2.0 also supports AI agent frameworks like OpenClaw and Hermes via API for autonomous social media workflows. With 10,000+ users, a 4.9/5 rating, and ISO 27001/SOC 2 certifications, it ranked #2 on Product Hunt on June 1, 2026 with 392 upvotes.

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Howie
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Howie is an AI scheduling assistant built to act like a highly responsive executive assistant for calendar management, meeting coordination, follow-ups, and scheduling edge cases that usually consume too much human time. It works through the channels people already use, handling recurring meetings, rescheduling, timezone coordination, conflict spotting, emergency calendar clearing, and personalized rules around availability or meeting preferences. The product is especially relevant for founders, executives, sales leaders, and other heavy-calendar users who want faster, more reliable coordination than typical scheduling links or manual assistant workflows can provide. Howie’s positioning is less about simple booking pages and more about delegated scheduling judgment with ongoing context. For professionals who treat calendar management as an operational bottleneck, Howie offers a strong AI-native assistant product with clear daily utility.

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AgentDOM
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AgentDOM is a universal runtime intended to make websites, desktop applications, and APIs accessible to AI agents through one consistent interaction layer. The project positions itself as a way for agents to act on software by intent, without relying only on brittle screenshots, scraping, or hand-written integrations. It ships as an npm package and includes an official product site, making it more usable than a research-only demo. AgentDOM is useful for developers building automation agents that must cross boundaries between SaaS, browser workflows, local apps, command-line tools, and REST APIs. It is notable now because the May 2026 repository launch targets a major practical bottleneck: giving agents reliable action surfaces beyond chat.

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Declaw Arena
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Declaw Arena is a public challenge environment for testing whether AI agents can be manipulated into leaking secrets or escaping runtime policy controls. It places real agents in isolated Declaw sandboxes with scenarios such as data analysts guarding PII, web-research agents fetching attacker-supplied URLs, data-sync agents posting records, email summarizers, and root-shell challenges. Users choose policy difficulty levels to see how prompt-only defenses compare with redaction, injection judging, strict egress controls, and runtime policies. The Show HN launch frames it as a CTF-style way to break an AI agent in a microVM, while the official page verifies no-signup interactive challenges and a security-focused product identity. It belongs on Smartoolbox for agent-security education, evaluation, and runtime-hardening workflows.

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OpenSquilla
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OpenSquilla is a token-efficient local AI agent that combines a shared TurnRunner loop, smart routing, persistent memory, sandboxing, web search, local embeddings and broad provider support. It exposes web UI, CLI and chat-channel entry points while supporting OpenRouter, OpenAI, Anthropic, Ollama, Gemini, DeepSeek, Qwen and other model providers through a pluggable layer. It is useful for developers and agent builders who want a self-hosted agent stack that spends context more carefully instead of simply increasing token budgets. The project is notable now because cost, routing and memory discipline are becoming decisive for long-running agents, and OpenSquilla packages those concerns into one open-source system.

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SubQ
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SubQ is a long-context AI model from Subquadratic that claims fully sub-quadratic performance for handling extremely large prompts. It is designed for developers, researchers, and AI product teams that need to process books, codebases, multi-document research sets, or enterprise knowledge archives without splitting everything into tiny chunks. The model is positioned around a 12 million token context window and large compute-efficiency gains, making it relevant for retrieval-heavy apps, legal analysis, engineering assistants, and long-form reasoning workflows. Its main difference is the architecture claim: instead of simply scaling standard attention, SubQ markets efficiency itself as the path to bigger context and lower inference cost.

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Agent Apprenticeship
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Agent Apprenticeship is an open ecosystem for teaching AI agents through real-world work loops, reusable experience, and collective training signals. The project combines a GitHub repository, seed dataset, and community site aimed at agent builders who want workflows that improve through repeated tasks rather than isolated prompts. It is notable because it frames agent improvement around apprenticeship-style practice: agents observe work, collect loop data, and reuse learned experience across future tasks. GitHub discovery found the project as a recently created, high-star AI-agent repository, and the official site describes “real-world agent work experience, looped into collective learning.” For Smartoolbox visitors, it fits as a developer-oriented AI agent training and workflow-loop resource rather than a consumer chatbot.

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Nerve
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Nerve is ClickHouse’s open-source, self-hosted runtime for AI agents. It is built for developers, data teams, and platform engineers who want personal assistants, autonomous workers, and internal agents that can run under their own infrastructure instead of living only inside a hosted chat product. The repository positions Nerve as a runtime on top of the Claude Agent SDK, making it relevant for teams that want to package agent behavior, connect tools, and operate repeatable workers with clearer deployment boundaries. It appeared on Show HN as a self-hosted runtime and has an official ClickHouse-owned GitHub repository, giving it stronger provenance than many new agent demos. Smartoolbox visitors looking for agent infrastructure should find it immediately recognizable and actionable.

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Intuned
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Intuned is a code-first browser automation platform that uses an AI agent to build and maintain your automations as deterministic, production-ready code. Instead of fragile record-and-playback scripts, Intuned generates clean, version-controlled automation code that teams can review, edit, and trust in production. The platform targets engineering teams and operations groups who need reliable browser automations at scale — from data extraction and testing to workflow orchestration — without the maintenance burden of traditional RPA tools. Launched on Hacker News on June 8, 2026 with 106 points as a YC S22 company, Intuned positions itself as the infrastructure layer for agentic browser operations where the AI writes the code and humans review and deploy it.

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Rotunda
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Rotunda is a browser built specifically for AI agents that need more reliable web automation than a normal browser session. The project provides a Firefox-derived browser plus Python and CLI tooling that works with Playwright-style workflows, keeps browser profiles and daemon sessions under a local Rotunda directory, and aims to reduce friction such as captchas that appear more often for automated agent use. It is for developers building browsing agents, research automation, testing workflows, or assistants that must interact with real websites repeatedly. Rotunda stands out because browser use is one of the hardest parts of agent work: giving agents a purpose-built browsing environment can make long-running automation more stable, inspectable, and reusable.

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DepTrust
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DepTrust is a local CLI and MCP server that helps AI coding agents avoid pulling vulnerable or risky dependency versions into a project. It checks package versions across npm, PyPI, crates.io, Go modules, RubyGems, NuGet, Maven, Packagist, pub.dev, CocoaPods, Hex.pm, Hackage, GitHub Actions, and more using public registry and OSV data. The output gives simple allow, review, or block recommendations based on known vulnerabilities and risk signals such as very new releases. That makes it useful for developers who let agents edit dependency files, generate install commands, or scaffold projects without human package-by-package review. It surfaced in a July 1 Show HN MCP query and was verified on the official clidey/deptrust GitHub repository, which documents both CLI and MCP usage.

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Agents SDK
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Agents SDK is OpenAI’s developer toolkit for building production-ready AI agents with less orchestration overhead. It gives teams core primitives for agent loops, tool calling, handoffs between specialist agents, guardrails, tracing, sandboxed execution, and persistent sessions, which makes it useful for shipping real workflows instead of demo bots. Developers can use it to build research agents, coding assistants, customer support systems, and multi-step automations that need reliable state management and observability. The SDK is especially well suited for engineering teams that want a lightweight, Python-first framework with enough structure to move quickly without hiding the underlying logic. What makes Agents SDK stand out is the combination of agent-native abstractions, debugging tools, and direct alignment with OpenAI’s evolving agent runtime stack.

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Harness
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Harness is an open-source AI-driven user-testing tool for iOS Simulator, macOS apps, and web apps. Developers describe a goal in plain language, then an LLM agent drives the interface and reports friction. It is aimed at solo builders, QA engineers, product teams, and app developers who want fast exploratory usability checks without writing brittle automation scripts first. For macOS and iOS workflows, the project offers a practical bridge between manual QA and fully scripted UI tests: the agent can attempt tasks, observe screens, and summarize where users may get stuck. It is notable now because new GitHub LLM-app searches surfaced it as a focused, starred project in the emerging category of agentic product testing.

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Exfault
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Exfault is an autonomous Android security-testing platform that uses AI agents, static analysis, dynamic analysis, authenticated workflows, and real cloud emulators to produce reproducible mobile security findings. It is aimed at security teams, mobile developers, auditors, and companies that need deeper Android app testing without manually driving every exploration step. The official homepage presents it as an AI security researcher for Android applications, with structured findings rather than a generic scanner demo. It is notable now because agentic testing is moving into specialized security workflows where evidence, reproducibility, and environment control matter. Exfault appeared in recent Show HN automation results as an agentic mobile-app pentesting tool and was selected only after the official product homepage resolved successfully with a clear software-application description.

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OpenClaw
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OpenClaw is an AI personal agent built for people who want an assistant that can actually take action instead of stopping at suggestions. The product is designed around doing real work across tools and workflows, which makes it useful for research, operations, messaging, organization, and multi-step task execution. Rather than behaving like a passive chat layer, OpenClaw is positioned as a hands-on system that can move from planning to execution with less babysitting. That makes it especially relevant for users who want persistent agent help across everyday digital work instead of one-off answers. For teams and individuals looking for an AI tool that behaves more like an active operator than a conversational demo, OpenClaw stands out as a practical personal agent platform.

Orgonaut Agentic Reorg Simulator is an interactive modeling tool for exploring what happens when AI agents enter a real engineering organization. It starts with a realistic SaaS product and engineering org, lets users add coding agents, replace support capacity, merge teams, adjust supervision assumptions, and immediately see cost, capacity, coordination, and delivery deltas. The simulator is useful for CTOs, VPs of Engineering, AI consultants, and leadership teams that need to discuss agentic restructuring with visible assumptions instead of vibes or static slides. It was discovered through a July 1 Show HN AI-tool query and verified on the official Orgonaut page. The broader Orgonaut product is in early access, and the simulator works as a concrete public entry point for AI operating-model planning.

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HubSpot Breeze
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HubSpot Breeze is HubSpot’s AI layer for marketing, sales, service, and CRM workflows. It brings AI assistants and agents into customer operations, helping teams draft content, enrich records, summarize conversations, automate repetitive tasks, and move prospects or customers through business processes. Marketing teams, revenue operations groups, sales reps, and support organizations can use Breeze to reduce manual CRM work while keeping activity tied to HubSpot’s customer data. The product is best suited for companies already using HubSpot or teams that want AI embedded directly into their go-to-market system. What makes Breeze distinctive is its native CRM context: the AI is not a separate chatbot, but part of the same platform where campaigns, deals, tickets, and customer history live.

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Stash
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Stash is an open-source persistent memory layer for AI agents that turns raw interactions into structured long-term knowledge. It stores episodes, facts, relationships, causal links, goals, failure patterns and confidence-decayed insights in Postgres with pgvector, then exposes memory through an MCP server compatible with Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Continue, OpenAI Agents, Ollama and OpenRouter-based workflows. Stash is for developers who want agents that remember across sessions without relying on opaque hosted memory features. It helps teams preserve context, reduce repeated explanations and build more personalized assistants. The project is notable now because it packages a deeper consolidation pipeline into a self-hosted single-binary style tool at a time when agent memory is becoming a core infrastructure layer.

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Entelligence AI
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Entelligence AI is an AI-powered engineering intelligence platform that solves production reliability issues by connecting codebases, observability metrics, and incident histories into a single continuous operational loop. Its core agent, Ellie, orchestrates four specialized agents — Observability, Incident, Code Review, and Remediation — to ensure the same class of bug never ships twice. The platform provides production-aware code review with a 47.2% F1 score (leading the 2026 AI Code Review Benchmark), automated incident triage-to-PR pipelines, and AI insights that help engineering leaders track ROI of AI spend. Entelligence integrates with GitHub, GitLab, Datadog, Sentry, PagerDuty, Slack, and Jira. Launched on Product Hunt in June 202026, it helps teams increase the production-yield of AI spend from $0.18 to $0.41 per $1 spent.

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ARC-AGI-3
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ARC-AGI-3 is a benchmark and evaluation platform for testing whether AI systems can solve novel reasoning tasks instead of only repeating memorized patterns. It is useful for AI researchers, model builders, benchmark watchers, and technical teams that care about generalization, planning, and abstract reasoning beyond standard leaderboard scores. The platform frames intelligence through tasks that require adaptation to new rules, making it relevant for evaluating agents and frontier models. In the digest, ARC-AGI-3 appeared as part of the broader conversation about measuring real progress in AI. It stands out because it focuses on hard generalization challenges, not another chatbot interface or productivity wrapper.

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SandboxAQ
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SandboxAQ is an AI and quantum technology platform building advanced models for scientific, security, and enterprise use cases. Its work spans drug discovery, molecular simulation, cybersecurity, sensing, and optimization, giving technical teams access to specialized AI systems beyond general-purpose chatbots. Researchers and enterprise innovation groups can use SandboxAQ to explore scientific workflows, accelerate candidate discovery, and apply AI to domains where physics, chemistry, or cryptography matter. The platform is best suited for organizations with complex technical problems and domain experts who need model-driven analysis rather than generic productivity automation. What makes SandboxAQ distinctive is its concentration on quantitative AI: it brings together scientific computing, simulation, and enterprise deployment in areas where accuracy and explainability are more important than casual text generation.

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Lelu
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Lelu is an open-source authorization engine for AI agents that checks every action, logs decisions, and routes risky steps to human review. It is built for developers moving beyond read-only chatbots into agents that can call tools, mutate systems, or handle sensitive workflow decisions. The project combines policy-as-code, confidence-aware gating, human-in-the-loop approval, SDKs for Python and JavaScript, and an audit trail so teams can understand why an agent was allowed or stopped. Lelu is notable now because it surfaced as a Show HN launch at the exact moment teams are worrying about prompt injection and over-permissive agents. The official repo and product site verify a usable agent-safety layer rather than a generic security blog post.

Introspection Pi framework is an open source framework for building agents that can inspect their own work, collect feedback, and improve research loops over time. It supports autoresearch workflows where agents generate hypotheses, review outputs, and use structured self-evaluation instead of relying on a single pass from a model. Developers and AI researchers can use it to experiment with self-improving agents, evaluation-driven pipelines, and systems that need transparent reasoning traces. It is best suited for technical teams building research assistants, coding agents, and iterative automation workflows. The framework stands out because it focuses on introspection as a first-class design pattern, making feedback loops and agent self-review easier to engineer and study.

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I Spy AI
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I Spy AI is a web tool and MCP server for detecting AI-generated images, deepfakes, and synthetic media. It is aimed at creators, buyers, moderators, educators, and agent builders who need a quick authenticity check before trusting or purchasing digital art and visual content. The product offers browser-based image analysis, a free tier, a paid unlimited plan, and an MCP setup so assistants such as Claude, Cursor, and other clients can call image analysis through JSON-RPC. That makes it more agent-ready than a simple upload form. I Spy AI is notable now because media authenticity is becoming a practical workflow issue, and the MCP server turns detection into a reusable tool for AI systems.

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CompactifAI API
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CompactifAI API is a backend API from Multiverse Computing that aims to reduce the cost of coding-agent and AI model workloads. It is marketed as a drop-in optimization layer that can support leading coding models while cutting inference costs by compressing or streamlining model usage behind the scenes. The API is aimed at AI infrastructure teams, developer-tool builders, and companies running agentic coding workflows where token spend and latency can become major operating constraints. CompactifAI API stands out because it focuses less on replacing models and more on making existing model workflows cheaper to run, which matters as coding agents move from demos into always-on production systems.

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WorkBeaver
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WorkBeaver is an agentic automation platform built for teams that want to offload repetitive operational work without coding or building brittle workflow maps. Instead of relying on drag-and-drop automation builders, it focuses on human-like execution inside the browser and across the software businesses already use every day. The product is positioned for admins, operators, and small to mid-sized teams that lose revenue to repetitive back-office work in areas like healthcare, accounting, legal operations, property management, and supply chain. WorkBeaver emphasizes fast setup, background execution, privacy, and consistent task completion, making it appealing for companies that want automation without hiring more staff or retraining teams. For organizations exploring practical agentic automation rather than experimental demos, WorkBeaver offers a clear, standalone workflow product with strong operational positioning.

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Beever Atlas
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Beever Atlas is an open-source, LLM-first wiki knowledge base that turns team conversations from Slack, Discord, Microsoft Teams, and Mattermost into a self-maintaining internal wiki. It is designed for teams whose operational knowledge lives in chat threads, decisions, and repeated explanations rather than formal documentation. Atlas uses AI to ingest those conversations, organize knowledge, and keep pages useful without forcing every employee to become a documentarian. The tool is relevant for engineering, support, operations, and product teams that want searchable institutional memory for both humans and AI agents. Its recent GitHub growth, official docs, and Google ADK positioning make it a strong Smartoolbox candidate in the knowledge-management side of agent infrastructure.

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Deja Vu
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Deja Vu is a local-first memory layer for AI agents and assistants. It stores preferences, facts, and reusable context on the user’s machine in SQLite, then exposes that memory through Python, REST, CLI, and MCP so multiple tools can share the same context without a hosted memory service. The README positions it as a third option between forgetful AI sessions and cloud-stored vendor memory: one local memory store that can be queried from Claude Desktop, a Python agent, or command-line workflows. It is useful for power users, developers, and teams experimenting with cross-tool agent memory while keeping data inspectable. Deja Vu is notable because persistent memory is becoming essential for practical agent workflows, but privacy and portability remain unresolved.

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SophMate
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SophMate is an AI assistant for WordPress and WooCommerce that works inside site-admin workflows while keeping meaningful changes behind approvals. The official site describes a copilot, WooCommerce-aware support and operations help, approval-based action plans, quick actions, playbooks, workflows, watchers, alerts, insights, and a knowledge base. That makes it useful for store owners, WordPress agencies, support teams, and ecommerce operators who want AI to draft product changes, coupons, support replies, marketing content, and monitoring actions without silently changing the live site. It surfaced through a July 2 Show HN automation result, and the homepage verifies a full plugin-like product with docs, tutorials, feature pages, and a CodeCanyon purchase path. For Smartoolbox, it fits productivity, agents, and ecommerce/site automation.

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CUGA
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CUGA is an open-source configurable generalist agent harness for planning, execution, state management, and policy-controlled AI workflows. It gives developers building blocks for agent behavior, including configurable reasoning modes, tool execution, and enterprise-friendly controls. Teams can use it to prototype internal agents, evaluate agent patterns, enforce policies, and build repeatable workflows without starting from a blank framework. It is useful for AI engineers, platform teams, and developers exploring production agent architecture. CUGA stands out by focusing on configurability and governance in the harness itself, making agent behavior easier to inspect, adapt, and standardize.

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InsForge
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InsForge is an AI-optimized backend platform built for agentic development and full-stack app creation. It gives AI coding agents access to core backend primitives such as authentication, databases, storage, deployment, edge functions, and LLM integrations from one place, making it easier to ship production-ready applications without stitching together multiple services. The platform positions itself as an AI backend engineer, letting developers describe what they want while their tools build against a real backend foundation instead of mocked infrastructure. InsForge supports modern frameworks and is aimed at teams that want agents to create scalable apps faster with fewer manual setup steps. For startups and developers experimenting with autonomous coding workflows, it offers a practical layer that combines backend infrastructure, deployment support, and agent-friendly workflows into a single product.

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Dari-docs
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Dari-docs is a CLI for testing whether developer documentation is clear enough for AI agents to actually use. Instead of relying on human intuition, it sends docs to simulated developer agents, asks them to complete concrete tasks, reports where they get stuck, and can generate proposed documentation edits from the feedback. It is aimed at developer-tool teams, open-source maintainers, API companies, and agent-native product teams that need docs to work for both humans and coding agents. The workflow turns documentation quality into a repeatable test loop: define a task, run simulated readers, inspect ambiguity, then review generated fixes locally. It is notable now because agent-readable docs are becoming a real product requirement rather than a nice-to-have.

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TERMS-Bench
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TERMS-Bench is a benchmark for evaluating LLM agents in realistic economic negotiation tasks. Instead of judging only whether an answer sounds correct, it tests whether agents can handle constraints, make tradeoffs, and reach agreements under structured scenarios where the environment verifies outcomes. Researchers, model labs, agent builders, and evaluation teams can use it to compare negotiation performance beyond simple win rates or generic reasoning scores. Its distinctive value is the focus on real-world agent behavior: planning, bargaining, constraint satisfaction, and outcome quality all matter, which makes it useful for teams building agents that must act rather than merely respond.

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MCPSpend
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MCPSpend is a real-time cost observability platform for Model Context Protocol tool calls. It wraps any existing MCP server and attributes spending per tool, project, and customer, giving developers and engineering managers a clear view of where their AI-agent budgets are going. The platform offers a free tier of 25,000 calls per month, is EU-hosted for data residency compliance, and supports Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, and other MCP-compatible clients. It is useful for teams deploying MCP-powered agents in production who need to track costs at the tool-call level rather than only at the provider API level. With 43 GitHub stars and topics spanning ai-agents, ai-observability, cost-tracking, and model-context-protocol, it targets a growing niche as MCP adoption accelerates across agent frameworks.

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Agentic AI Foundation
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Agentic AI Foundation is an open standards organization focused on making AI agents work together more reliably across tools, vendors, and real-world production systems. It brings projects such as interoperability specifications, governance processes, and ecosystem coordination under a neutral foundation so builders can adopt shared standards instead of reinventing integrations for every stack. That makes it especially useful for developers, infrastructure teams, protocol contributors, and companies building agent platforms that need long-term compatibility and industry alignment. What sets Agentic AI Foundation apart is its role as a coordination layer for the broader agent ecosystem, helping move important protocols and implementation guidance from vendor-led efforts into a more durable community-backed home for open agent infrastructure.

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Flock
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Flock is an open-source bot that runs a Claude Code-powered AI development team on a server and lets users drive it from chat. A feature request sent through Telegram or VK can be planned, built on a branch, tested, reviewed, and turned into a pull request inside an isolated workspace. It is aimed at developers, indie teams, and automation-heavy engineering groups that already use Claude Code but want a persistent team-style interface instead of one-off local sessions. The repository highlights Docker images, per-chat sandboxing, support for Claude Pro/Max or Anthropic API keys, and a workflow that separates planning, implementation, tests, and review. It was found through GitHub’s recent ai-agent search with substantial early stars and verified from the official duckbugio/flock README.

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Agent Workflows
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Agent Workflows is a reusable library of engineering processes for AI coding agents and human developers. It gives agents structured procedures for project initialization, feature development, bug fixing, code review, incident debugging, refactoring, and technical-debt cleanup, with safety and validation checkpoints shared across workflows. The repo is useful for developers who want more reliable agent behavior without hard-coding one-off instructions into every prompt. It is notable now because model quality can drift silently and teams need process scaffolding around autonomous coding tools. Smartoolbox users get a practical productivity resource that can be copied into agent environments, adapted for team standards, and used to make AI-assisted engineering work more repeatable.

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Proxy
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Convergence AI is your go-to AI-powered digital assistant for automating daily tasks efficiently. From managing emails and scheduling appointments to summarizing articles and handling online shopping, this tool streamlines office admin and simplifies personal tasks. It can aggregate customer reviews, provide academic paper insights, and even assist with booking flights. Convergence AI stands out for its natural language command feature, making it easy to offload repetitive tasks with ease. Whether you need help analyzing data or simply want to streamline your daily routine, Convergence AI is a practical and functional tool designed to make your life easier.

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SharkAuth
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SharkAuth is an open-source authentication server for the agentic era, built as a single binary that helps AI agents receive delegated access safely. The official repository describes authentication for agent delegation, which matters when assistants need to act across tools without simply borrowing a user’s long-lived credentials. It is useful for developers building agent platforms, MCP-enabled services, internal automation, or products where humans need to approve what an agent may do and for how long. SharkAuth is timely because agent workflows are moving from read-only chat into real account actions, and identity boundaries are becoming a security bottleneck. Its Show HN launch and active GitHub repository make it a concrete infrastructure listing rather than a concept paper.

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Snyk Agent Scan
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Snyk Agent Scan is an open-source security scanner for AI agent components on a developer machine, including agents, MCP servers, and skills. The official Snyk repository says it discovers and scans agent components for prompt injections and vulnerabilities, with a related technical report on emerging threats in the agent skill ecosystem. It is useful for developers, security engineers, and platform teams adopting Claude Code, Cursor, MCP tooling, and other agent workflows but worried about hidden prompts, unsafe components, or supply-chain exposure. Snyk Agent Scan is notable now because agent skills and MCP servers are spreading faster than traditional review processes. It gives Smartoolbox visitors a practical local security utility from an established security vendor.

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Vapi
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Vapi is a voice AI platform for building, testing, and deploying conversational phone and speech agents. It gives developers APIs and tooling for real-time voice interactions, speech recognition, text-to-speech, call handling, and integrations with modern AI models. Teams can use Vapi to create customer support agents, sales qualification bots, appointment schedulers, voice interfaces, and internal automation systems. It is designed for startups, developers, and product teams that want production-ready voice agents without stitching together telephony, speech, and LLM infrastructure from scratch. Vapi stands out by focusing on low-latency voice orchestration and developer-friendly deployment for real business workflows.

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ViralMint
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ViralMint is an open-source viral content pipeline for scouting trends, analyzing competitors, generating AI videos, and auto-publishing content without a subscription SaaS wrapper. The project combines trend discovery, competitor analysis with Whisper and AI, script or content generation, captions, voice, and publishing-oriented workflow pieces behind a local bring-your-own-keys setup. It is aimed at creators, indie hackers, marketing teams, and agencies that want a hackable alternative to black-box short-video tools. ViralMint appeared as a fresh Show HN MCP/agent lead and was verified through its official repository and site. It is notable because growth workflows increasingly connect research, generation, and distribution into one agent-driven loop rather than isolated creative tools.

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Remote Labor Index
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Remote Labor Index is a benchmark platform for measuring how well AI systems complete economically valuable remote-work projects from end to end. It evaluates whether models can handle realistic tasks, coordinate tool use, and produce useful deliverables rather than only answering isolated benchmark questions. The index is useful for AI labs, investors, enterprise buyers, and researchers who need a clearer view of automation progress in knowledge work. Its value comes from focusing on real remote-work outcomes, making it a practical complement to abstract reasoning, coding, or math scores when assessing how close AI agents are to replacing or augmenting human workflows.

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Project Brain
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Project Brain is an open-source folder structure and collaboration protocol for AI-assisted projects that need continuity across context wipes, new sessions, and new collaborators. Instead of relying on a single chat window to remember decisions, it gives a project one durable place for goals, state, constraints, artifacts, and handoff context so coding assistants can re-enter the work with less re-explanation. The repository positions it as a local-first methodology for AI memory and agent safety, useful for developers, designers, indie builders, and teams that use Cursor, Claude Code, Codex, or similar agents. It surfaced in fresh GitHub AI-coding searches with strong traction and fits Smartoolbox as a practical workflow tool for agentic development.

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McpAudit
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McpAudit is a static pre-install security scanner for Model Context Protocol servers. Developers run it before wiring an MCP server into Claude, Cursor, Codex, or another agent, and it flags risky patterns such as command injection, credential or environment-variable exfiltration into LLM-visible output, over-broad filesystem access, excessive tool scope, and dynamic eval. The project is useful for AI engineers, security reviewers, platform teams, and open-source maintainers who want a fast sanity check before giving agents new tools and permissions. It surfaced as a fresh Show HN launch and was verified through the official GitHub repository. McpAudit is notable because MCP adoption is moving quickly, but security review often lags behind installation convenience.

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Letterbook
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Letterbook is an AI-native customer support platform for growing companies that need one place to handle email, website, app, Discord, and API-driven tickets. Its AI agent connects to customer data, billing systems, commerce tools, and knowledge sources so incoming requests can be triaged, drafted, assigned, and resolved with human approval instead of manual inbox work. The product is useful for founders, lean support teams, SaaS operators, and post-PMF startups that want faster support without adopting a heavy legacy help desk. It surfaced today on Show HN as a Claude Code-style customer support workflow, and the official site verifies a broader support platform with omnichannel tickets, workflows, analytics, hosted help center, and data-connected AI resolutions.

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IBM Bob
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IBM Bob is an AI coding agent that works inside software-development workflows to help generate code, refine implementations, suggest refactors, and support delivery from IDEs, terminals, and pipelines. It is built for engineering teams that want enterprise-oriented coding assistance with IBM’s governance, security, and integration posture. Developers can use it to accelerate repetitive implementation work, review changes, and keep projects moving across larger codebases. IBM Bob is notable because it targets professional software teams rather than casual coding experiments, pairing agentic code help with the kind of vendor support and enterprise context large organizations usually require.

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Project Glasswing
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Project Glasswing is a cybersecurity initiative from Anthropic that helps major organizations identify and mitigate critical software vulnerabilities using advanced AI-assisted analysis. It gives selected partners access to cutting-edge defensive security capabilities for finding severe flaws across operating systems, browsers, and other widely used infrastructure before attackers can exploit them. The program is built for enterprise security teams, critical infrastructure operators, technology vendors, and organizations responsible for high-risk software environments. What makes Project Glasswing distinctive is its focus on defensive deployment, cross-industry collaboration, and early access to frontier AI capabilities that are powerful enough to reshape vulnerability discovery. For teams working on software security at scale, it offers a rare blend of AI-driven detection, partner coordination, and mission-critical risk reduction.

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Unspaghettit
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Unspaghettit is an open-source tool that creates executable behavior specifications for AI coding agents, enabling behavior-driven development without prompt spaghetti. It is aimed at developers and engineering teams using Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, and similar agents who want to define expected behaviors as testable specifications rather than relying on ad-hoc prompts that produce inconsistent results. The tool lets teams write behavioral specs that agents can execute against, ensuring that generated code matches intended behavior patterns. It launched on Hacker News with 5 points and the GitHub repository describes behavior-driven AI development without prompt spaghetti. Unspaghettit addresses a growing quality-control challenge: as coding agents handle more complex tasks, the need for structured, executable specifications becomes critical for maintaining reliability and predictability in agent-generated code.

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Agent Gate
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Agent Gate is a deterministic CI firewall for pull requests produced by AI coding agents. It checks PR contracts, risky file paths, agent instruction drift, workflow permissions, and test evidence before code can merge, without checking out untrusted PR code or making runtime LLM calls. The tool is aimed at engineering teams already using Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, or other coding agents who need a repeatable safety layer rather than another probabilistic reviewer. It is notable now because agent-written pull requests are becoming routine, but most teams still lack clear proof that an autonomous change followed policy and supplied evidence. Agent Gate turns that review into a GitHub Action and local replay analyzer.

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GLM 5.1
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GLM 5.1 is Z.ai’s frontier AI model family for chat, reasoning, coding, and agent-style workflows. It is aimed at builders who need a capable language model for assistants, software development help, research tasks, and multi-step problem solving. Developers, AI product teams, and enterprises can use it through Z.ai’s hosted experience and related APIs or integrations where available. The model’s appeal is its positioning as a competitive general-purpose system with strong benchmark visibility, including agent evaluation results surfaced in today’s digest. It belongs in tool stacks where teams compare model quality, latency, cost, and reasoning behavior across providers.

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Verigate
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Verigate is cryptographic trust infrastructure for AI agents, focused on signed authorization receipts, verifiable agent identity, and compliance reporting. It targets teams deploying agents in regulated or auditable environments where it is not enough to know that an agent acted; reviewers need evidence that the action was authorized, chained, and later verifiable. The official page highlights Ed25519 signatures, hash-chain audit logs, Merkle proofs, framework-aligned reports, and a design with zero LLM in the trust path. For builders of autonomous workflows, Verigate solves a practical governance problem around proof, permissions, and after-the-fact inspection. Its Show HN launch makes it timely as more companies move from experimental agents to systems that touch real accounts, data, and infrastructure.

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Larkin
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Larkin is authorization middleware for APIs and services that accept x402 agent payments. It helps builders answer who is paying, not just whether a payment happened, by adding trust scoring, signed receipts, and preflight checks for agent-driven commerce. The tool is aimed at developers creating paid APIs, autonomous-agent services, and x402-enabled products where programmatic buyers need identity, policy, and risk handling before access is granted. Larkin is notable now because payment rails for agents are becoming practical, but authorization and accountability remain thin. By focusing on receipts and payer verification, it fills a specific infrastructure gap for the emerging agent economy rather than acting as another generic payment wrapper.

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Ragnerock
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Ragnerock is an AI research intelligence platform for teams that need to explore, extract, monitor, and build on heterogeneous business data. Its official site positions it around operators, workflows, queries, notebooks, and integrations with AI providers, databases, cloud storage, and formats such as SQL, Excel, PDF, HTML, and images. That makes it a practical fit for analysts, operators, founders, and compliance-heavy teams that want document intelligence and monitoring without building a custom data platform first. The product is notable in this discovery run because it launched publicly through Show HN as an AI data analysis tool, while the homepage already presents a broader platform with documentation, pricing, trust resources, and clear workflow language rather than a thin demo page.

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Blitzy
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Blitzy is an autonomous software development platform that uses AI agents to plan, build, and ship enterprise applications from product requirements. It supports teams with requirements analysis, code generation, implementation workflows, and review loops so projects can move from idea to working software faster. Engineering leaders can use it for internal tools, modernization work, and rapid application delivery when traditional development queues are too slow. Blitzy is aimed at startups, enterprise product teams, and technical operators that want agentic software creation rather than another autocomplete plugin. Its differentiator is the claim of coordinating many specialized agents around full application delivery, not only isolated coding assistance.

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SERV Reasoning v2.0
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Agent reasoning/verification launch with multipath reasoning, Shadow Agents, verification hints, benchmark tooling, and Prompt Guard.

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Rival AI
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Rival AI is a compliance assistant and regulatory corpus for critical infrastructure teams that need faster answers from dense policy material. Its Show HN launch describes a system that aggregates regulatory bodies and source documents, chunks and embeds the material, then uses agents to reason over sources and complete compliance-manager tasks. The product is useful for operators in energy, utilities, infrastructure, and regulated industrial environments where manual interpretation is slow and mistakes are expensive. Rival AI is notable now because agent workflows are moving into specialized professional domains where generic chatbots lack source grounding, workflows, and auditability. Its official homepage and fresh launch make it a concrete AI compliance candidate rather than a broad legal-tech concept.

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AICVScreen
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AICVScreen is an AI screening tool that helps recruiters and hiring teams rank large batches of CVs against a job description in minutes. Instead of manually reading every resume before a shortlist can be created, users can upload candidate CVs, provide the role requirements, and let the system compare experience, skills, and fit signals automatically. The product is designed for small teams, agencies, and hiring managers who need faster first-pass review without adopting a full applicant tracking system. AICVScreen keeps the human decision-maker in control while reducing repetitive screening work, making it useful for high-volume roles, early hiring rounds, and teams that want structured candidate comparisons before interviews.

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Snowflake
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Snowflake is a cloud data platform for storing, processing, sharing, and activating enterprise data across analytics, AI, and application workflows. In AI toolchains, teams use Snowflake to centralize governed datasets, run machine-learning pipelines, connect business data to agents, and make models available close to the data they need. It supports data engineering, BI, app development, and emerging document-AI or model-serving workflows through integrations with major AI providers and cloud ecosystems. Snowflake is best for data teams, enterprise AI builders, and organizations that need compliance, scale, and cross-team collaboration. Its advantage is treating data infrastructure as the foundation for AI products, not just as a reporting warehouse.

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MongoDB
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MongoDB is a developer data platform for building applications that need flexible document storage, search, vector search, and AI-ready retrieval workflows. Teams use it to store operational data, power app backends, create semantic search experiences, and connect structured data with agent or chatbot systems. Its Atlas cloud platform adds managed hosting, scaling, security controls, triggers, charts, and integrations across modern developer stacks. For AI builders, MongoDB is most useful when an application needs production-grade data storage alongside vector search and retrieval-augmented generation patterns. It fits software teams, product engineers, and data-heavy startups that want one database platform for transactional workloads and AI application context instead of stitching together separate databases and search services.

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Storybloq
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Storybloq is a cross-session context system for AI coding workflows, packaged as a file convention, CLI, MCP server, and Claude Code skill. It helps developers keep tickets, issues, handovers, review lenses, roadmap notes, and project state inside a repository so each coding session builds on previous work instead of starting from zero. That makes it useful for solo builders and teams who rely on AI coding agents but need continuity across interruptions, branches, and multi-day tasks. Storybloq is especially relevant now because agentic coding tools are getting more capable, while memory and handoff discipline remain weak points. Its official site, npm package, Mac app page, and GitHub repo provide enough product surface for a clear Smartoolbox listing.

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PROWL
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PROWL is an AI research system from Odyssey for finding failures in world models and converting those failures into useful training data. It uses reinforcement-learning agents to explore simulated environments, identify where a model behaves incorrectly, and generate targeted examples that can improve future model versions. The system is aimed at AI researchers, robotics teams, simulation builders, and developers working on spatial reasoning or interactive world models. Use cases include model evaluation, synthetic data generation, safety testing, and iterative improvement of generative environments. PROWL stands out because it treats failure discovery as an active agent task, not a passive benchmark, helping teams turn model weaknesses into a structured feedback loop for training.

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Attio
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Attio is an AI-native CRM for sales, growth, and customer teams that want a more flexible system of record. It can enrich contacts and companies, pull context from email and product data, and let teams ask questions about their pipeline instead of manually digging through records. Attio is useful for startups, agencies, and go-to-market teams that need custom CRM workflows without heavy enterprise setup. Its strength is combining structured CRM data with AI-assisted research and automation, so teams can move from scattered relationship data to actionable account intelligence. For teams replacing spreadsheets or rigid CRMs, it offers a cleaner way to combine relationship management, automation, and AI-powered account understanding.

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Prava
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Prava is a payments infrastructure platform built specifically for AI agents to handle financial transactions autonomously. As AI agents increasingly perform real-world tasks — booking services, purchasing resources, managing subscriptions — they need a payment layer that supports programmatic authorization, spending controls, and auditability. Prava provides a developer-friendly API for issuing virtual cards, setting transaction limits, and routing payments through agent workflows with full logging. It's designed for teams building autonomous AI systems that need to transact without constant human approval for every purchase. Prava includes compliance tooling, real-time transaction monitoring, and customizable approval workflows, making it suitable for enterprise AI deployments where financial controls and auditability are non-negotiable.

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Backlog
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Backlog by Mazin Ahmed is a local-first task and context manager designed for humans and AI coding agents to share one durable project queue. Instead of leaving plans, memory, and next steps inside a long chat thread, Backlog stores tasks, plans, docs, and agent-learned context in a SQLite database with a CLI, web UI, MCP support, full-text search, backups, and signed actor attribution for every write. It is useful for developers running Claude Code, Codex, Semgrep, or parallel subagents who need fresh sessions to resume work without losing project state. The official GitHub README documents binaries, MCP setup, task workflows, agentic loops, and MIT licensing, while the July Show HN launch makes it directly relevant to Smartoolbox’s code-assistant and agent categories.

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Cerebras CS-3
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Cerebras CS-3 is a wafer scale AI compute platform built for extremely fast model training and inference workloads. It pairs Cerebras hardware, systems software, and cloud access to serve teams that need high throughput tokens, large model experimentation, and scalable accelerator infrastructure without managing conventional GPU clusters. AI labs, enterprise ML groups, infrastructure teams, and developers building latency sensitive applications can use Cerebras to evaluate an alternative path for serving and training advanced models. The platform is notable for using wafer scale architecture rather than many separate chips, which can simplify communication patterns and deliver strong performance for selected AI workloads. It fits best as an infrastructure tool for serious model deployment and experimentation.

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Artisan
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Artisan is an AI sales automation platform that provides AI employees for prospecting, outbound sales, and revenue operations workflows. It helps sales teams find leads, write outreach, manage sequences, research prospects, and reduce manual work across the top of the funnel. The product is built for startups, agencies, and growth teams that want always-on sales execution without hiring a large SDR team. In the digest, Artisan appeared in the context of a controversial AI advertising campaign, but the underlying product is a concrete sales-agent platform. Artisan stands out by packaging AI automation as role-based digital workers, making it easier for teams to adopt sales AI as a workflow rather than a collection of disconnected tools.

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BYOB
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BYOB, short for Bring Your Own Browser, is a local MCP server that lets AI coding tools control the Chrome browser a user already has open. Instead of launching a sterile headless browser, BYOB connects Claude Code, Cursor, Cline, Windsurf, and similar assistants to real logged-in tabs, cookies, screenshots, and browsing context. It is built for developers and automation builders who need agents to work with authenticated pages, bot-detection-heavy sites, or existing browser state without cloud browser infrastructure. The project is notable because browser-use agents often fail exactly where human sessions succeed. BYOB’s GitHub README presents a clear installation path, Chrome MV3 extension support, and practical examples for summarizing timelines, searching, and interacting with logged-in sites.

Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform is Google Cloud’s platform for building, deploying, governing, and optimizing AI agents at enterprise scale. It combines model selection, agent orchestration, integrations, observability, and policy controls in one environment so teams can move from prototype to production without stitching together separate tools. Organizations can use it to create internal copilots, automate workflows across business systems, and manage agent behavior with stronger security and oversight. The platform is built for technical teams that need reliable infrastructure, integration with Google Cloud services, and a path to governed multi-agent operations. What makes it stand out is its focus on enterprise-grade lifecycle management, bringing agent development, operations, and governance together under a single Google Cloud offering.

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paragents
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paragents is an open-source terminal UI for running multiple AI-agent sessions side by side with explicit permissions, session continuity and conflict-aware execution. It lets a developer create foreground and background sessions, submit prompts, switch between agents, approve or deny risky actions, and inspect effective permission settings from one panel. The project targets users who want parallel agent work without letting several assistants trample the same files blindly. It is notable now because multi-agent coding is moving from demos into daily workflows, and paragents focuses on the operational layer: scheduling, approvals, per-session context and preflight checks rather than another model wrapper.

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Nullsec-S1
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Nullsec-S1 is an open-source security-native LLM system built to audit AI-generated software before it reaches production. It targets developers, security reviewers, vibe coders, agent builders, and teams shipping MCP tools or autonomous workflows. Instead of a generic chatbot review, the project returns structured JSON security audits with findings, severity, exploit scenarios, recommended fixes, secure patches, and a deterministic safety-layer decision. The README positions the release candidate as purpose-built for the fast-growing problem of LLM-generated app security, including AI agents, Web3 flows, and coding-assistant output. Smartoolbox visitors get a practical developer/security tool they can inspect, run, and adapt from an official GitHub repo with linked releases and a Hugging Face adapter.

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Approxima
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Approxima is an open-source, agentic web testing platform that lets teams describe end-to-end test journeys in plain English and have an LLM-driven browser agent run them against a live application. It is built for product engineers, QA teams, and founders who want coverage for user flows without constantly maintaining brittle selectors or scripts. The platform includes goal mode, self-healing journeys, streaming captions of the agent’s reasoning, and reusable skills for common testing steps. It is notable now because AI browser agents are moving from demos into practical QA workflows, and Approxima packages that idea as a self-hostable product teams can inspect, adapt, and run alongside existing CI.

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Google Co-Scientist
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Google Co-Scientist is an AI science assistant designed to help researchers generate, refine, and evaluate scientific hypotheses. It supports literature-aware reasoning, experimental ideation, and structured exploration of complex research questions with human oversight. Scientists, lab teams, biotech researchers, academic groups, and R&D organizations can use it to accelerate early discovery work and pressure-test possible directions before committing expensive resources. The tool is best suited for workflows where AI can assist with synthesis and hypothesis generation while experts remain responsible for validation. What makes Google Co-Scientist notable is its explicit focus on scientific reasoning rather than broad productivity, bringing agent-style assistance into research domains that need traceability, rigor, and collaboration between models and specialists.

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Tavily Project Plan
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Tavily Project Plan is a developer search API plan for AI applications that need reliable web research, retrieval, and source-grounded context. It provides API credits for teams building agents, research assistants, monitoring workflows, and retrieval-augmented generation systems that must pull fresh information from the web. Developers can use Tavily to power autonomous browsing, competitive intelligence, lead research, question answering, and knowledge-update pipelines without assembling a search stack themselves. The plan is aimed at students, builders, and small product teams that want enough monthly capacity to experiment with production-like AI search workflows. What makes it useful is Tavily’s focus on agent-ready search results rather than generic search pages, making it easier to feed clean web context into LLM systems.

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OpenClaw Launch
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OpenClaw Launch is a managed hosting service for deploying OpenClaw and Hermes Agent instances to messaging channels such as Telegram, Discord and WhatsApp without running the infrastructure yourself. It is for builders, indie operators and teams that want a personal or business AI agent online quickly but do not want to configure servers, channel adapters, background jobs and deployment pipelines. The official site presents a 30-second deployment flow, multi-channel support and a low starting price, making it a practical onboarding layer for the OpenClaw/Hermes ecosystem. It surfaced in Show HN as a fresh launch and is distinct from the existing OpenClaw framework listing because it is a hosted deployment product rather than the core open-source/project homepage.

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CRMKit
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CRMKit is an agent-first CRM backend built so ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, and other agents can manage sales records through plain HTTP instead of a human-centric UI. The official repository describes a headless system of record for contacts, organizations, opportunities, tasks, tokens, audit trails, concurrency, migrations, hosted/self-hosted deployments, OAuth-protected MCP access, and prebuilt agent skills. It is useful wherever an AI agent needs to remember people, accounts, opportunities, and follow-up work without improvising a fragile markdown file or scratch database. A recent Show HN lead surfaced it as an agentic CRM driven over plain HTTP, and the official GitHub repository verifies active releases, hosted crmkit.ai positioning, configuration, MCP endpoints, and clear operational docs.

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MCP
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MCP, short for Model Context Protocol, is an open standard that lets AI assistants and agents connect to external tools, data sources, and software systems through a consistent interface. Instead of building one-off integrations for every app, developers can use MCP to expose capabilities such as file access, APIs, databases, and workflows in a reusable way that many agent systems can understand. It is especially valuable for AI product teams, developer tool builders, and enterprises that want more portable agent infrastructure with less integration overhead. What makes MCP stand out is its growing ecosystem momentum and its practical role as connective tissue between large language models and the systems where useful work actually happens.

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Auto Learning Agents
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Auto Learning Agents is a self-hosted, open-source AI agent platform built around a lightweight Docker setup and an Elixir/OTP supervision model. The official getting-started page explains how users can clone the repository, add model keys for Claude, OpenAI, Gemini, or local Ollama models, then run a bundled dashboard, services, database, and tool layer locally. It is useful for technical users and teams that want to experiment with durable agent nodes, automation, memory, and self-hosting without stitching together cloud infrastructure first. The July 2 Show HN launch identified it as a self-hosted AI agent platform, and the official site verifies clear installation steps, provider flexibility, local ownership, and documentation. Smartoolbox visitors interested in agent platforms and privacy-conscious automation are the target audience.

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Sparks AI
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Sparks AI is a no-code agent platform that lets users build, customize, collaborate with, and share teams of AI agents inside a single workspace. The product combines agent creation, app integrations, persistent context, real-time collaboration, and an agent marketplace, making it feel closer to an AI super-app than a single-purpose chatbot. Users can start from templates, choose models and tools, invite teammates, and run research or operational tasks with agents that work together on projects. That makes Sparks AI relevant for founders, operators, and small teams who want more than one-off prompting and need reusable agent workflows with shared context. Its positioning around collaboration and publishable agents gives it a practical edge for organizations experimenting with multi-agent work without wanting to assemble infrastructure from scratch.

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LangSmith
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LangSmith is an observability, evaluation, and debugging platform for LLM applications built by the LangChain team. It gives developers traces, prompt runs, dataset management, eval workflows, and performance monitoring so they can understand how agents and chains behave in real usage. Teams can use LangSmith to compare prompts, inspect retrieval failures, review conversation paths, and catch quality regressions before they affect users. It is built for AI engineers, application developers, and product teams maintaining chatbots, agents, RAG systems, and other model-powered features. LangSmith stands out because it connects deeply with the LangChain ecosystem while still supporting the broader workflow of testing, monitoring, and improving AI applications over time.

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Mercury Command
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Mercury Command is an AI assistant inside Mercury that executes finance and banking tasks from natural-language instructions. It can help with payments, invoices, transaction categorization, account actions, and team management while keeping approval controls in the workflow. Founders, finance operators, and startup teams can use it to reduce dashboard switching and complete routine money operations faster. The product is most relevant for businesses already using Mercury accounts, because the assistant is built into the financial workspace rather than bolted on as a generic chatbot. Its value comes from combining banking context, operational automation, and human approval for safer AI-assisted finance work.

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Injective Agents
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Injective Agents is an onchain AI agent platform for building autonomous crypto and DeFi workflows on the Injective network. It lets users create agents that can trade, route orders, monitor markets, and execute blockchain strategies from a guided launch experience instead of hand-coding every automation. The tool is useful for DeFi builders, quantitative traders, ecosystem teams, and crypto operators who want agentic workflows connected directly to onchain actions. Its advantage is the combination of AI agent setup with native blockchain execution, making it more specialized than a general chatbot, automation builder, or trading dashboard for teams experimenting with autonomous finance.

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Fiddler
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Fiddler is an AI observability and governance platform for monitoring, explaining, and controlling machine learning models and AI agents in production. It helps teams detect drift, inspect model behavior, evaluate performance, manage risk, and build trust across complex AI deployments. Organizations can use Fiddler to support responsible AI programs, troubleshoot agent decisions, document compliance, and understand how identity, permissions, and data flows affect automated systems. It is built for AI engineering teams, platform teams, risk leaders, and enterprises running high-stakes model-powered applications. Fiddler stands out by combining observability with governance, giving companies a practical control plane for AI systems that need transparency, reliability, and accountability at scale.

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Relaymux
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Relaymux is a lightweight, tmux-backed meta-harness for running local coding agents from a remote chat interface. It is aimed at developers who already use command-line agents like Codex, Claude Code, or pi.dev but want to start, monitor, interrupt, and debug those runs from Telegram without hiding them in a black box. The key design choice is practical: agent sessions are launched in visible tmux windows, so the human can attach locally, inspect the terminal, and take over when needed. That makes Relaymux useful for mobile-triggered coding tasks, homelab workflows, and agent operators who care about observability. It is notable now because it appeared on Show HN and has a concise install path and official GitHub docs.

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Railway
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Railway is an agent-native cloud platform for deploying applications, services, databases, and background workloads with minimal infrastructure setup. It helps developers move from repository or prototype to running software, while handling environments, builds, networking, logs, and operational basics. AI startups, solo builders, agent teams, and engineering groups can use Railway to host products, run experiments, and support fast iteration without managing every cloud primitive manually. The platform is especially useful for shipping many small services or agent workloads quickly. What makes Railway stand out is its developer-first deployment experience and its push toward infrastructure designed for AI-era software, where automated agents and rapid experimentation need reliable, simple production surfaces.

Google Search Console MCP by CalmSEO connects AI assistants to Search Console data through a read-only MCP server. After a Google OAuth connection, users can ask Claude, Cursor, Codex, or ChatGPT about clicks, impressions, CTR, rankings, top queries, top pages, page-level queries, and sitemap status in plain English. It is useful for SEO operators, content teams, indie site owners, and technical marketers who want analysis inside their existing AI assistant rather than manually exporting Search Console reports. The free read-only design lowers adoption friction while still supporting richer CalmSEO keyword and SERP tools on the same endpoint. It is notable now because MCP is turning analytics data into callable assistant context.

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Taste MCP
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Taste MCP connects a user's visual taste profile to AI tools through the Model Context Protocol. Taste lets people swipe on designs, upload their own work, and save references, then turns those signals into a living design preference profile that can be used inside Cursor, Claude, Figma Make, ChatGPT, and any MCP-compatible client. It is useful for designers, founders, product builders, and vibe-coding users who want AI generators to understand their personal style instead of repeatedly correcting colors, layouts, and references. The tool was nominated by today's X launch artifact and verified through the official Taste product page. It is notable because taste and brand preference are becoming portable context for creative AI workflows.

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Loop Engineering
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Loop Engineering is an open-source reference and toolkit for designing autonomous work loops around coding agents instead of manually prompting them step by step. The official site frames loop engineering as a system pattern: schedule work, triage, maintain state, create worktrees, invoke implementers and verifiers, connect tools through MCP, and keep humans in the judgment seat. It includes practical patterns such as PR babysitting, daily triage, CI sweeping, post-merge cleanup, and security dependency sweeps, plus npx starter commands for loop-init and loop-audit. The project is aimed at engineers already using Claude Code, Codex, Grok, or similar agents who want repeatable, auditable automation. It was selected from fresh GitHub searches because it has a clear productized documentation site and concrete CLI tooling.

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Open Science
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Open Science is an open-source, local-first AI workbench for scientists that positions itself as an alternative to hosted AI-for-science products. It combines a desktop workspace, literature and code workflows, figures, reports, review steps, MCP configuration, and research-specific agent skills into an auditable environment where outputs can be reproduced and inspected. The tool is aimed at researchers, labs, graduate students, and scientific software builders who want AI assistance without turning experiments, citations, or artifacts into opaque chat transcripts. Its model-agnostic architecture and Tauri desktop direction make it useful for teams that need local control as well as AI productivity. The GitHub repo surfaced in recent AI-agent/MCP searches and verified active documentation, roadmap, macOS MVP status, and MIT licensing.

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Amazon Proteus
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Amazon Proteus is an autonomous warehouse robot enhanced with AI so workers can direct it using plain language. It is designed to move through fulfillment environments, understand operational instructions, and support logistics workflows that previously required more manual coordination. The product is relevant for warehouse operators, robotics teams, supply-chain leaders, and enterprise automation groups studying how natural-language interfaces can make robots easier to deploy. Its differentiator is the combination of physical autonomy and conversational direction: workers can guide robotic behavior without needing specialized programming interfaces. Amazon Proteus fits Smartoolbox as an AI-agent and robotics automation example, although it is more enterprise infrastructure than a self-serve SaaS tool.

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ML Intern
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ML Intern is an open-source AI agent from Hugging Face that autonomously researches academic papers, builds datasets, writes code, and ships production-quality machine learning workflows. Unlike standard agents, ML Intern deeply understands the Hugging Face ecosystem — it reads papers on arXiv, walks citation graphs, finds the right datasets, and executes the full LLM post-training loop from literature review to model training. Released in April 2026 and still trending in June, it is designed for ML researchers and engineers who want to automate the repetitive parts of the research-to-production pipeline. The agent is available as a GitHub repository and a Hugging Face Space, and has been featured in multiple benchmarks showing it can match or exceed Claude Code on scientific reasoning tasks. It represents a significant step toward autonomous ML engineering.

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Omar
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Omar is a terminal user interface for creating and managing large agentic organizations from one command-line workspace. It is designed for developers and AI operators who want to coordinate many coding or research agents in parallel, arrange them into hierarchies, and keep track of delegated work without manually juggling dozens of terminal tabs. The homepage positions Omar as a way to build powerful agent teams from a single terminal, which maps well to the growing multi-agent development workflow. Omar is notable now because solo builders and teams increasingly run parallel agents, but orchestration and visibility are still primitive. Its Show HN launch and official homepage provide a clear, verifiable product identity.

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MobileClaw
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MobileClaw is an experimental Android AI-agent runtime for controlling a real phone. Instead of acting as a simple chatbot, it can observe the screen, use Android automation and accessibility capabilities, route skills, run on-device Python tools, manage memory and execute scoped task loops. It is aimed at developers and power users exploring mobile agents that can operate apps, build workflows and verify outcomes on actual devices. The project is useful for Smartoolbox visitors because phone automation is an under-served agent category compared with browser and desktop tooling. It is notable now as mobile VLM control, app automation and agent skill routing converge into usable open-source runtimes.

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Closed Rings
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Closed Rings is a CLI-first time tracker built for developers who want timekeeping to fit inside terminal and AI-agent workflows. It lets users start, close, and retroactively log work from the command line, then produces stand-up summaries, focus reports, context-switch counts, and exports grouped by project or day. The product also exposes API access and an MCP surface so coding agents can record or adjust time without forcing developers into a separate dashboard. That makes it useful for consultants, freelancers, and small teams who need billing-grade tracking with less ceremony. Its fresh Show HN launch is notable because more developer tools now need to be agent-addressable, not just human-clickable.

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Vibecode Pro Max Kit
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Vibecode Pro Max Kit is a spec-driven coding harness that gives AI agents persistent project context, memory, and structured workflows across sessions. Instead of letting agents rediscover project structure every conversation, it uses agents.md specifications to encode architecture, conventions, dependencies, and goals so agents stay aligned with the codebase. The kit includes a 12-agent architecture and 32 built-in skills covering planning, coding, testing, and shipping workflows. It works with Claude Code and OpenAI Codex across any tech stack, installing in under 30 seconds. With 683 GitHub stars, 162 forks, and MIT licensing since its May 27 launch, it targets developers, product owners, and technical leaders who want to eliminate context rot in long-running AI coding sessions. The project reflects the fast-growing category of agent-harness tooling for vibe-coding workflows.

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Komanda.ai
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Komanda.ai is a business-focused AI workspace that packages hundreds of practical AI assistants for sales, marketing, marketplace operations, copywriting, planning, and other everyday company tasks. Instead of acting like a general chatbot, it organizes AI around real business workflows, helping teams automate routine work, generate content, support customer-facing tasks, and choose the best model for each use case. The platform includes analytics, management controls, and task-specific AI employees designed for non-technical staff who want outcomes without extensive prompt engineering. It is aimed at SMB teams, operators, and founders who need applied AI rather than experimental tools. What makes Komanda.ai stand out is its strong business-process framing and broad catalog of task-specific assistants built around practical operational work.

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AuthPlane
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AuthPlane is a self-hosted OAuth 2.1 authorization server designed specifically for Model Context Protocol servers. It is for developers and teams building MCP tools who have reached the point where a demo server is easy, but secure authorization, token issuance, PKCE flows, validation, and federation become the hard part. The project ships as a Go server with MCP authorization-spec focus, deterministic agent-facing documentation, and guidance for integrating it into existing MCP servers. That makes it a practical infrastructure listing for the growing AI-agent ecosystem rather than a generic OAuth library. It is notable now because it launched on Show HN as MCP security demand is rising and has an official, focused GitHub repository.

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Genomi
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Genomi is an open-source, local-first agent harness that turns an AI assistant into a personal DNA exploration tool. Users install it on their own machine, connect genome files or reference data, and ask supported agents questions about variants, traits, evidence limits, and genetic context without uploading raw DNA to a cloud dashboard. It is aimed at privacy-conscious biohackers, researchers, and technical users who want conversational access to personal genomics while keeping data local. Genomi fits Smartoolbox as a specialized AI agent tool rather than a generic health app because it provides agent-ready installation guides, local indexing, and source-aware answers. It is notable now because it surfaced both in today’s X launch leads and Show HN, with an active official repo and homepage.

Seekon Product Intelligence is an agentic product-catalog platform for AI apps, shopping agents, and product discovery workflows. Its developer page presents a structured way to discover, compare, and connect with products, which makes it useful for builders creating assistants that need reliable product context instead of shallow web snippets. The tool is aimed at AI application developers, commerce teams, and catalog operators who want product intelligence that can be consumed by agents. It solves the problem of turning messy product information into a navigable, comparable layer for recommendations and shopping-style interactions. The Show HN launch makes it timely because more agents are moving from answering questions to making product-aware decisions and handoffs.

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sandboxed
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sandboxed is an open-source backend for AI app-builder products that need isolated cloud development environments, built-in coding agents, and live preview URLs. It is designed for teams building Lovable-, Bolt-, v0-, or Replit-style experiences without standing up Kubernetes. Developers can run the control plane on their own machine or server and give each user a sandbox where generated apps can build and preview safely. The project is notable now because AI app builders are multiplying, but the infrastructure behind secure previews and per-user environments is hard to reproduce. Smartoolbox users get a concrete developer-platform tool with a fresh GitHub repo, strong adoption signal, and a clear AI-agent infrastructure use case.

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Copilot Cowork
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Copilot Cowork is Microsoft's AI-powered collaboration feature built for long-running, multi-step tasks inside Microsoft 365. Unlike standard Copilot chat, Cowork handles complex workflows that span documents, spreadsheets, and emails — executing extended operations that would typically require multiple manual steps. A standout feature is Critique, which uses GPT to draft content and Claude to review and refine it, combining the strengths of two leading AI models in a single workflow. Copilot Cowork is available through Microsoft's Frontier program for M365 subscribers. It targets enterprise teams and professionals who need reliable AI assistance for deep, multi-stage work rather than quick one-off queries. The dual-model approach and deep M365 integration make it uniquely suited for organizations already invested in the Microsoft ecosystem.

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Retool
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Platform for building and shipping internal apps securely, promoted with AI/vibe-code credits.

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wavecat
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wavecat is a local personal AI agent that watches the user’s screen and builds context without sending data to a cloud service. It is aimed at people who want ambient assistance but are uncomfortable with always-on remote monitoring from centralized AI products. The official site describes a desktop agent where models run locally, keeping personal data on the machine while still giving the assistant continuous context about what the user is doing. That makes wavecat useful for productivity, computer-use experimentation, and privacy-conscious personal automation. It is notable now because it launched on Show HN on June 29, 2026, exactly as interest is shifting from chat windows toward screen-aware agents that can understand workflows in the background.

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Cora
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Cora is an AI-powered workspace from Every for organizing work and personal workflows around a more proactive assistant experience. It is positioned for people who want help managing everyday information, decisions, and tasks without stitching together many small utilities. Creators, operators, and knowledge workers can use Cora to turn messy inputs into clearer next steps and reusable context. Its differentiator is the product philosophy: a personal AI tool aimed at practical work-life coordination rather than a generic chatbot prompt box. The product is worth tracking as personal AI shifts from answering isolated questions toward managing context, memory, and everyday follow-through.

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Arkon
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Arkon is a self-hosted enterprise AI knowledge hub and MCP server for organizations that want governed, reusable context for Claude and other LLM clients. It centralizes SOPs, policies, internal documentation, and organizational knowledge into a structured wiki, then serves that information through permission-scoped endpoints instead of ad hoc copy-paste. The tool is built for teams adopting AI across departments where security, consistency, and traceability matter. By combining RAG-style knowledge management with Model Context Protocol access policies, Arkon helps employees use the same approved source of truth while reducing context drift. It is notable now because enterprises are moving from personal chatbot experiments toward managed AI infrastructure that plugs directly into agents and assistants.

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Subterranean
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Subterranean is a no-code platform for building AI-native full-stack apps with specialist agents handling core parts of the product lifecycle. It presents itself as a technical co-founder style system that brings together data, functions, user interface generation, and deployment in one place, reducing the friction of stitching together multiple tools. This makes it appealing for founders, makers, and product teams who want to create complete applications with AI assistance while keeping control over the end result. Instead of limiting users to a chatbot or a narrow code generator, Subterranean focuses on full application assembly for practical business and product use cases. It fits the growing category of agent-assisted app creation tools aimed at rapid shipping, iterative product development, and AI-first software workflows.

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Suture
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Suture is an ultra-low-latency reverse proxy that repairs truncated and malformed JSON in LLM streaming responses before an application tries to parse them. It sits between an app and providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic, Google Vertex AI, and AWS Bedrock, watching server-sent events and emitting the missing closing characters when a tool-call argument or structured output stream is cut off. Suture is for AI application developers, agent builders, and LLMOps teams who have seen JSONDecodeError or serde_json EOF failures from max-token limits, context-window edges, or dropped sockets. It is notable now because structured tool calling is becoming core infrastructure, and a tiny proxy-level fix can prevent brittle retries, failed agent actions, and malformed tool inputs.

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hty
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hty is a terminal-control tool for AI agents, described as Puppeteer for the terminal. It gives agents a way to run interactive CLI and TUI programs by reading the rendered terminal screen, sending keystrokes, replaying sessions, watching logs, and managing long-lived sessions through a background server. That makes it useful for developers building agents that need to handle editors, REPLs, authentication prompts, scaffolding wizards, CI jobs, or remote terminal workflows without brittle text-only assumptions. The official docs include installation, session commands, AI-agent guides, CI automation, remote observation, and replay references. hty is timely because reliable terminal interaction remains one of the awkward gaps between chat-style coding assistants and real autonomous developer workflows.

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Manus
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Manus AI is a cutting-edge general AI agent that excels in bridging thoughts with actions. Powered by advanced LLMs and seamless tool integration, Manus AI outperforms competitors in the GAIA benchmark, showcasing unrivaled capabilities for automation, productivity enhancement, and tackling complex tasks. Established in 2025, Manus AI stands out as a versatile AI assistant that transforms user ideas into tangible outcomes. Boasting top-tier performance in the GAIA benchmark, Manus AI surpasses industry standards across all difficulty levels. By blending sophisticated AI functionalities with practical implementation, Manus AI goes beyond providing information, offering strategic insights and efficient goal achievement through natural conversations that grasp context and intent with precision.

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Superlog
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Superlog is an open-source, agentic observability workspace for OpenTelemetry traces, logs, and metrics. Its README describes a system that ingests telemetry, groups noisy signals into incidents, watches infrastructure while teams sleep, and provides a local-first debugging surface with agent runner interfaces for pluggable investigations. It is especially relevant for engineering teams adopting AI coding agents, because the project also ships skills that help install and use Superlog inside a favorite coding-agent workflow. The repository was created in June 2026 and surfaced with strong traction in GitHub searches, while the official README verifies a real web app, API, OTLP ingest proxy, background workers, Postgres schema, and ClickHouse-backed queries. This is a practical developer tool, not just a demo.

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AgentBox SDK
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AgentBox SDK is an open-source TypeScript SDK for running coding agents such as Claude Code, Codex, and OpenCode inside swappable sandboxes. It gives developers one API for launching agents as interactive server processes, streaming events, preserving approval flows, and changing sandbox providers without rewriting application code. Supported sandbox targets include local Docker and providers such as E2B, Modal, Daytona, and Vercel, making it useful for teams building agent products, eval systems, or CI-style coding workflows. AgentBox is notable because it focuses on the runtime layer around agents rather than another chat UI. As coding agents become embedded in products, a clean abstraction for agent-plus-sandbox execution is increasingly valuable.

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HubSpot Agent CLI
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HubSpot Agent CLI is a command-line interface designed from the AI agent's perspective, enabling agentic experience (AX) for interacting with HubSpot's CRM platform. Currently in private beta, it allows AI agents to manage HubSpot data, workflows, and customer relationships through structured CLI commands instead of navigating the graphical interface. The tool reduces ambiguity and fewer steps compared to GUI-based interactions, making it ideal for developers building AI agents that need CRM integration. HubSpot Agent CLI stands out as one of the first enterprise CRM platforms to offer a purpose-built agent interface, recognizing that AI agents are becoming first-class users of business software. For teams building sales, marketing, or support agents, it provides a cleaner integration path than API-only approaches.

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Contral
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Contral is an AI coding IDE built around teaching while developers build, rather than simply completing code and hiding the reasoning. Its public launch positions the product as a Build Mode plus Learn Mode environment for Java mastery, with an AI agent that explains decisions as users work. It is useful for students, junior developers, bootcamp learners, and self-taught builders who want AI-assisted shipping without losing the learning loop. For teams, the same approach can make generated code easier to review because decisions are surfaced instead of buried. Contral is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and already exposes an official affiliate page, suggesting a real go-to-market motion rather than a thin demo.

We’re very excited to share something we’ve been building. Notte <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.notte.cc&#x2F;">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.notte.cc&#x2F;</a> is a full-stack browser agent platform built to reliably automate a wide range of workflows.<p>Browser agents aren’t new, but what is still hard is covering real-world flows reliably. The inspiration for Notte was to make a full-featured platform that bridges the agent reliability gap. We’ve packaged everything via a singe API for ease of use:<p>- Site Interactions - Observe website states, scrape data and execute actions<p>- Structured Output - Get data in your exact format with Pydantic models<p>- Stealth browser sessions - built-in CAPTCHA solving, proxies, and anti-detection<p>- Hybrid workflows - Combine scripting and AI agents to reduce costs and improve reliability<p>- Secrets vaults - Credential management to store emails, passwords, MFA tokens, SSO, etc.<p>- Digital personas - Digital identities with unique emails, phones for account creation workflows<p>With these tools, Notte allows you to automate difficult tasks like account creation, form filling, work on authenticated dashboards. Close compatibility with Playwright allows you to cut LLM costs and improve execution speed by mixing web automation primitives and include agents only for specific parts that require reasoning and adaptability.<p>Here’s a short YouTube demo: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=b1CzmfpdzaQ" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=b1CzmfpdzaQ</a><p>If any of this sounds interesting, you can run your first agent following our quickstart on GitHub <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nottelabs&#x2F;notte" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nottelabs&#x2F;notte</a>. Or play around with our free plan through our Notte Console: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;console.notte.cc&#x2F;">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;console.notte.cc&#x2F;</a><p>We’d love to hear if there’s anything else required before you’d try or trust it on your own workflows :)

Feynman Research Agent is an Obsidian plugin that turns a local knowledge vault into a research assistant powered by the user’s own Anthropic API key. It is designed for students, researchers, writers, analysts, and heavy Obsidian users who want agentic help over their notes without uploading an entire vault to a separate SaaS. The official Obsidian plugin page states that it runs locally in Docker and requires Obsidian 1.5 or newer, giving users a clear install path and security model. As a Smartoolbox listing, it fits the gap between generic chatbots and serious knowledge-work tools: the agent lives where research notes already are, can reason over local material, and supports workflows such as literature review, synthesis, and question answering inside Obsidian.

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Unwrap
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Unwrap is an AI-powered customer feedback analysis platform that helps teams turn support tickets, reviews, surveys, sales calls, and community comments into product insights. It groups feedback themes, tracks customer pain points, and surfaces evidence that product, engineering, and leadership teams can use when deciding what to build next. The platform is useful for product managers, customer experience teams, founders, and growth teams that need a clearer view of what users are repeatedly asking for. Unwrap stands out by focusing on unstructured customer feedback and connecting scattered voice-of-customer data into prioritized, searchable insights for product decision-making.

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Vida.app
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Vida.app is a proactive AI agent positioned around generating working websites and handling a wide range of practical app-building use cases from a prompt. The current X launch lead showed a prompt-to-website demo with a free trial, and the official homepage identifies Vida as a proactive agent aimed at many state-of-the-art workflows. It is most relevant for founders, marketers, creators and solo builders who want to move from idea to usable web page quickly without starting in a blank design or code editor. For Smartoolbox users, Vida fits the agentic productivity and vibe-coding trend: describe the outcome, let the system assemble a functional result, then iterate. The official homepage was reachable and distinct from the social launch post, so it is listed as a verified candidate rather than tweet-only evidence.

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Kept
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Kept is a local-first knowledge manager that saves AI conversations as Markdown files and gives users a desktop app for searching, browsing, connecting and reusing them. It supports conversation archives from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok and Kimi, storing data under a local vault with SQLite full-text search, topic views, project organization, graph views and an MCP server. Kept is useful for power users, researchers, developers and teams whose chat histories contain debugging trails, product decisions, prompt patterns and half-finished ideas that otherwise stay trapped in vendor UIs. It is notable now because AI chat history is becoming practical working memory, and Kept turns that history into portable local files that agents can reuse.

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Watch Skill
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Watch Skill gives AI agents a practical way to watch video, live streams, local recordings, or their own screen output. It turns media into a persistent searchable index of frames, OCR, transcripts, timestamps, confidence scores, and citations, then exposes the engine through MCP tools, CLI, REST, and skill bundles. Agents can ask what happened at a moment, search across videos, cache answers, learn from reported mistakes, and use a loop where they capture their own UI, critique it, fix code, and verify the result. It is useful for coding agents, QA workflows, video analysis, documentation review, and multimodal automation. The official GitHub repo documents tested integrations with Claude Code, Cursor, Codex CLI, Windsurf, Gemini CLI, Cline, and REST clients.

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SoMatic
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SoMatic is an agent-first CLI for native desktop UI automation using Set-of-Marks screenshots. It runs a local YOLO model to detect and number interactive elements on screen, then gives agents a structured coordinate map so they can click, type, and navigate native apps, browsers, PDFs, terminals, and web tools by mark ID or pixel coordinate. Every command returns JSON, and the project includes an MCP server plus headless Xvfb support for agent workflows. SoMatic is useful for developers building desktop-control agents, QA automation, and assistants that must operate beyond browser-only Playwright scripts. It is notable because reliable screen grounding is a core missing piece for real computer-use automation.

FutureHouse AI scientist system is a biology-focused research platform for evaluating biological data, generating hypotheses, and supporting scientific discovery workflows. It helps researchers analyze complex evidence, connect findings across papers and datasets, and identify promising next experiments. Biologists, drug discovery teams, academic labs, and research organizations can use it to augment literature review, data interpretation, and hypothesis development while keeping expert judgment in the loop. The system is most relevant for teams facing information overload across fast-moving life-science domains. What makes FutureHouse AI scientist system distinctive is its narrow scientific mission: instead of being a general assistant, it is built around the workflows and reasoning patterns needed to advance biological research.

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OpenGravity
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OpenGravity is a zero-install, browser-based agentic coding workspace inspired by Google Antigravity’s interface. It combines a live xterm.js terminal, WebContainer-powered execution, local file-system sync, and a sidebar agent that can run commands and edit files in real time. The project is deliberately lightweight, built with plain HTML, CSS and JavaScript, and uses a bring-your-own-key model rather than a hosted agent backend. It is best suited for developers who like Antigravity-style workflows but want a hackable, open implementation for experimentation and basic coding tasks. It is notable now as a new Show HN and GitHub launch with active early interest, while still clearly labeled alpha software.

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TrainForgeTester
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TrainForgeTester is an open-source regression testing tool for AI agents that need deterministic scenario checks instead of fuzzy demo evaluations. Its README explains that hand-written or generated multi-turn scenarios run against a live agent API, while structural behavior is checked with Python equality and only limited natural-language consistency is delegated to an LLM as binary questions. The project is aimed at developers, QA engineers, and agent-platform teams that need to test tool calls, unsafe actions, and conversation flows repeatedly without flaky scoring. TrainForgeTester is notable because agent reliability is quickly becoming a release-blocking problem, and ordinary unit tests do not capture multi-turn behavior. Its fresh Show HN launch and official GitHub documentation make the tool concrete enough for ingestion.

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Brain0
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Brain0 is an offline-first “black box” for AI-written code that connects commits to the agent prompts, files, decisions, and context behind them. Instead of only showing what changed, it passively ingests git history and local coding-agent transcripts from tools like Codex and Claude Code, builds a decision graph down to files and functions, and exposes drift detection, DLP auditing, risk scoring, attestations, and MCP memory for future agents. It is built for teams already letting coding agents produce major diffs but needing provenance, auditability, and safer review. Brain0 is notable because it addresses a practical governance gap around agentic development: knowing why a change happened and what the agent read. The official repository verifies npm, GUI, Rust/TypeScript core, and open-core boundaries.

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slash-agent
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slash-agent is a native terminal copilot that turns an active Bash session into an AI-assisted coding workspace. Instead of running a heavy background app, developers type /agent when they need help; it reads recent terminal context, tmux scrollback, or command history, then can diagnose errors, edit files, execute commands, and sync directory or environment changes back into the shell. It supports local private models through Ollama as well as cloud providers such as OpenAI or Azure OpenAI. The project is notable for its lightweight, zero-daemon workflow and fresh Show HN launch, making it a practical pick for developers who prefer terminal-native AI assistance.

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Clay Seal
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Clay Seal is a runtime control plane for AI agents that checks individual actions instead of trusting broad permissions for an entire session. Its official site describes three separable layers: single-use capability tokens for specific actions, attested agent identity tied to where code is running, and signed receipts that auditors or customers can verify later. This is aimed at teams deploying agents into workflows where refunds, data access, web actions, tool calls, or regulated operations need stronger guardrails than a static API key. Clay Seal is notable because it combines agent-specific policy enforcement with open standards such as SPIFFE, Biscuit tokens, Ed25519, SCITT, OpenTelemetry GenAI, MCP, and AWS Nitro attestation. The fresh Show HN launch makes it timely for Smartoolbox’s agent-security audience.

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ScoutMesh
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ScoutMesh is a hosted MCP gateway that turns Claude, ChatGPT, Codex, and similar assistants into sourcing tools for recruiters and go-to-market teams. Instead of integrating each people-data provider separately, users connect one MCP endpoint and query sources such as Apollo, GitHub, Lusha, People Data Labs, Exa, and prog.ai from the assistant they already use. The page emphasizes provider-cost transparency, no markup, source selection by role or query, and starter credits rather than a separate subscription. It is useful for recruiting, founder sourcing, sales research, and talent intelligence workflows where an AI assistant needs structured access to multiple people databases. The X launch artifact included the official URL, and the homepage verified a concrete MCP product with supported sources.

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RinHelp
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RinHelp is an AI support diagnosis tool for technical support teams that need evidence-backed answers instead of another generic chatbot. The homepage says it starts from a Crisp support thread, checks GitHub code context and Sentry runtime evidence, then returns a diagnosis draft for human review. That workflow is well suited to founders, engineers, and support leads who are overloaded by bug reports but still need to understand root causes before replying to customers. RinHelp is notable because it targets the messy handoff between support conversations, source code, and production telemetry, where many AI assistants lack enough context to be trustworthy. The Show HN launch and official page both present a concrete product with pricing, login, and a clear technical-support use case.

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AgentPort
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AgentPort is an open-source integrations gateway that gives AI agents access to external services while adding human-centered safety controls for destructive operations. The GitHub launch describes two-factor approval for risky actions, which is a useful pattern for teams that want agents to connect to APIs without letting them silently delete data, send messages, or mutate production systems. It is relevant for developers building internal agents, workflow automation, MCP-like tool layers, or customer-facing assistants that need auditable permissions. As more products bolt tools onto LLMs, AgentPort stands out by focusing on the control plane between agents and integrations rather than the model itself. The official repo provides the clearest homepage and identity for the project.

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CanvasMind
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CanvasMind is an open-source low-code visual programming IDE for building algorithm and AI workflows on a node-based canvas. The project uses Python, NodeGraphQt and qfluentwidgets to support drag-and-drop component orchestration, asynchronous execution, file operations, loop control, variable mapping, visual debugging and one-click export of workflows into standalone runnable projects. It is aimed at developers, researchers, automation builders and technical educators who want a desktop workflow builder that can move from visual experimentation to deployable code. The X artifact surfaced it as a fresh AI/algorithm canvas lead, and the official GPLv3 GitHub repository verifies extensive commit history, documentation, examples, releases, multilingual README files and a roadmap for code-to-canvas creation and cloud execution.

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Skybridge
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Skybridge by Alpic is a React framework for building production MCP apps for Claude and ChatGPT. The V1.0 launch page describes an improved API, redesigned devtools, multi-cloud support, and an app-building workflow aimed at giving developers a faster path from MCP idea to usable product. It is for developers and teams who want to create richer MCP applications rather than simple one-off servers, especially when they need frontend patterns, deployment support, and tooling around the protocol. Skybridge was nominated by today’s X launch artifact and selected only after the official Alpic blog verified the product identity. It is notable because the MCP ecosystem is quickly shifting from raw integrations toward app frameworks and developer experience layers.

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ktx
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ktx is an executable context layer for data and analytics agents, built to help Claude Code, Codex and other AI agents query business data accurately through MCP, skills, memory and a semantic layer. Instead of letting agents improvise SQL or analytics context, ktx gives them a structured interface for metrics, data definitions and repeatable data access. The project is useful for data teams, analytics engineers and AI application builders who want safer agentic analysis over internal datasets. It was discovered through recent GitHub MCP searches, has official documentation and npm packaging, and stands out because context quality is becoming a core bottleneck for production data agents.

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DAC
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DAC is an open-source dashboard-as-code tool from Bruin for teams that want business dashboards to be reviewable, versioned, and easier for AI agents to modify safely. It lets users define dashboards in YAML and TSX, validate them locally, serve them interactively, and connect to common warehouses such as Postgres, BigQuery, Snowflake, Redshift, Databricks, and MySQL through Bruin connections. Its built-in semantic layer centralizes metrics and dimensions so widgets can generate consistent SQL instead of copying fragile queries. DAC fits data teams, analytics engineers, and AI-assisted development workflows where agents should produce standardized dashboard changes that can go through normal code review. The recent Show HN launch and active repository make it a timely developer-tool listing.

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Faz
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Faz is a safety layer between AI agents and databases, designed for teams that want agents to query or modify data without uncontrolled access. The official repository was launched as a database guardrail for agent workflows, making it relevant to developers who connect assistants to production-like SQL, analytics, internal tools, or customer data. Faz fits the growing need for policy, inspection, and mediation between model-generated actions and sensitive systems. It is especially useful for AI engineers, backend developers, and platform teams that are comfortable giving agents tools but still need boundaries, logging, and safer execution patterns. The tool is notable now because database-connected agents are powerful, but one bad query can be expensive, destructive, or privacy-sensitive.

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Conductor
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Conductor is a Mac workspace for running a team of AI coding agents in parallel. It gives developers a dashboard for assigning implementation tasks, reviewing changes, and coordinating multiple agent workstreams without losing track of context. Teams can use it to prototype features, fix bugs, compare approaches, and keep human approval in the loop before code reaches a repository. Conductor is best for engineers, founders, and product teams who already use coding agents and need a cleaner way to manage several jobs at once. Its standout angle is the conductor-style interface: instead of chatting with one assistant, users supervise a small software team from one focused desktop environment.

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Vigils
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Vigils is a local security control plane for AI agents that intercepts tool calls, enforces approval policies, and prevents credential leakage. Built with Rust, Tauri, and SQLite, it provides a desktop application with a Chrome MV3 extension that sits between AI coding agents and the operating system, giving users visibility into every action an agent takes. The platform targets developers and teams deploying AI agents like Cursor, Claude, and ChatGPT in production or sensitive environments where unrestricted agent access creates real risk. Vigils solves a critical gap in the agent ecosystem: most agents operate with full system privileges, making it easy for them to accidentally expose secrets, execute dangerous commands, or access unauthorized resources. With 50 GitHub stars, Apache-2.0 licensing, and active development through June 2026, it represents the growing category of agent-security infrastructure.

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Agentctl
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Agentctl is a local control plane for coding agents that gates risky actions, records decision traces, and can replay previous sessions against different policies. It is aimed at developers and teams using tools such as Claude Code or Codex who want more control over package installs, shell execution, secret access, file writes and network activity. Instead of relying only on a chat transcript, Agentctl stores policy, traces and approvals under a local state directory and includes a terminal UI for governance. That makes it useful for safer agent experiments, enterprise policy trials, and audits of what an autonomous coding assistant tried to do. It is notable now because coding agents are powerful enough to need local guardrails, not just clever prompts.

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Cua
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Cua is an open-source infrastructure stack for computer-use agents: AI systems that can operate full desktop environments rather than only text APIs. It provides sandboxes, SDKs, drivers, and benchmarks for building, evaluating, and deploying agents that interact with macOS, Linux, and Windows-style desktops. The project is useful for AI-agent builders, automation engineers, and researchers who need reproducible cloud desktops, background app control, or benchmarking around browser and operating-system workflows. Cua was a strong recent Show HN signal and already has substantial GitHub adoption, making it more than a toy demo. Its positioning is especially relevant as computer-use models and desktop agents move from research examples into production automation.

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rocketplaneIO
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rocketplaneIO is an open-source, self-hosted AI SRE for Kubernetes clusters that combines zero-instrumentation eBPF observability with a guardrailed copilot that can investigate and fix issues after approval. The repository describes a system where the agent reads service maps, logs, PromQL metrics, traces, and live Kubernetes inventory, then proposes one reversible action pipeline from a safety catalog instead of getting free-form shell or kubectl access. It is aimed at platform, DevOps, and SRE teams experimenting with AI operations while keeping control over risk, rollback, and evidence. The GitHub search result and official README verify a July 2026 alpha release, Apache-2.0 licensing, BYO-LLM, air-gapped deployment goals, Next.js/Go/eBPF/ClickHouse architecture, and Kubernetes-first positioning.

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EngageAI
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EngageAI helps businesses embed powerful AI assistants into mobile and web applications to automate tasks and interact with users through natural language. The platform enables companies to create intelligent AI assistants that can understand user intent, perform actions, and provide personalized responses within their existing applications. EngageAI focuses on seamless integration with mobile and web apps, allowing businesses to enhance user engagement without requiring users to switch contexts or learn new interfaces. The technology leverages advanced language models to enable contextual understanding and task completion directly within the host application environment.

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bitdrift
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bitdrift is a mobile observability platform that helps teams inspect real-world app behavior, logs, and telemetry from user devices. It gives developers and support teams programmable access to production signals so they can diagnose issues, validate hypotheses, and build agent skills around live app data. Mobile engineering teams, product reliability groups, QA teams, and AI operations builders can use bitdrift to understand crashes, performance problems, and user-specific failures without relying only on aggregate dashboards. The platform is especially useful when support or debugging workflows need precise runtime context. What makes bitdrift stand out is its API-first observability approach, making mobile telemetry accessible to both humans and automated agents investigating production problems.

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Cursor AI SDK
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The Cursor AI SDK lets developers integrate Cursor's AI coding capabilities into third-party tools and custom workflows. Used by products like Slashspace for agentic canvas integration, it provides programmatic access to Cursor's code generation, editing, and reasoning features. Ideal for tool builders and platform engineers who want to embed state-of-the-art AI coding assistance into their own applications.

Figure builds AI-powered humanoid robots designed to work in physical environments built for people. The platform combines robot hardware with vision, language, and action models so humanoids can reason about tasks, move through workplaces, and manipulate objects. It is relevant for robotics teams, automation leaders, manufacturers, logistics operators, and AI researchers watching the shift from software agents to embodied agents. Figure stands out because it focuses on general-purpose humanoids rather than narrow single-task machines, with an emphasis on deploying robots into labor-intensive settings where human-like form factors can use existing tools, spaces, and workflows.

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Canonry
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Canonry is an open-source, agent-first AEO monitoring platform for teams that need to understand how AI engines cite and crawl their sites. It tracks brand and content citations across ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity, and local LLMs, then combines those checks with server-log ingestion, Google Search Console, GA4, and crawler/referral diagnostics. The workflow is built for SEO teams, founders, publishers, and technical marketers who care about answer-engine optimization rather than only classic search rankings. Canonry is notable now because AI visibility is becoming operational: teams need repeatable monitoring, local/self-hosted data, and agent-readable diagnostics to learn why models mention them, ignore them, or fetch their pages.

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AccInt
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AccInt, short for Accreted Intelligence, is a work model layer for teams experimenting with AI coding agents and other autonomous workflows. Instead of treating agent sessions as disposable chat logs, it turns actions into commitments, captures receipts, applies authority gates, and records outcome credit so the system can learn which paths deserve reuse. The product is aimed at developers, operators, and AI-tool builders who want local, inspectable operational memory for agent-run work on hardware they control. It is notable now because it launched on Show HN as a concrete response to a growing problem: agent work needs review, provenance, reusable runtimes, and trust boundaries before it can become reliable production infrastructure.

Mina is an AI meeting assistant that actively participates in calls rather than passively taking notes. It joins meetings on Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams, responds in real time to answer account questions, pulls live metrics, and executes follow-up tasks while the conversation is still happening. Unlike traditional meeting AIs, Mina can be deployed as a function-aligned teammate — an AI Sales Engineer, Scrum Master, Recruiter, Customer Success manager, or L&D Coach — with 40+ built-in skills and 200+ integrations including Salesforce, HubSpot, Jira, Linear, Notion, and Slack. Launched on Product Hunt on June 1, 2026 as the #1 product of the day with 483 upvotes, Mina eliminates post-meeting administrative overhead by filing tickets, sending follow-ups, and booking next steps before the meeting ends.

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CapFrame
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CapFrame is an agent-authority hygiene leaderboard that scans MCP servers for security and delegation risks before developers connect them to coding agents or internal workflows. The public leaderboard scores real MCP servers and highlights whether they follow safer patterns around prompts, tools, resource access, and agent authority boundaries. It is useful for AI engineers, platform teams, and security reviewers who are adopting MCP but need a quick way to compare ecosystem risk rather than trusting every server equally. The tool surfaced on Show HN on 2026-06-27 after scanning 87 MCP servers, and the official CapFrame page is reachable with a dedicated leaderboard experience. For Smartoolbox visitors, it fits as a practical governance and evaluation tool for the fast-growing agent tooling stack.

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Tessl
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Tessl is an AI software-development platform focused on helping teams specify, build, and maintain software with more automation around agents and workflows. It targets the gap between writing code once and keeping complex systems aligned with changing requirements, dependencies, and product behavior over time. Developers can use Tessl-style tooling for AI-assisted implementation, workflow design, architectural planning, and maintaining codebases as systems evolve. It is aimed at engineering teams, platform builders, and AI-native startups that want software creation to become more intent-driven and less manual. Tessl stands out by framing AI coding as a lifecycle problem, not just an autocomplete or chat problem.

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Moumantai
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Moumantai is a self-hosted runtime for building personal apps that mix reliable code with LLM agents and responsive interfaces. It targets developers and technical operators who want agent-driven tools that can run across phone, tablet, desktop and other screens without handing everything to a hosted SaaS. The project is notable as a Show HN launch because it packages the agent layer, app runtime and device adaptation into one open-source stack, making it useful for private dashboards, automations and internal assistants. For Smartoolbox visitors, Moumantai fits the growing need for controllable AI apps: keep deterministic code where precision matters, add LLM behavior where flexibility helps, and deploy the result as a self-owned application instead of a throwaway prompt workflow.

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AgentSearch
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AgentSearch is a self-hosted search API for AI agents that need web retrieval without depending on paid hosted search products. The official README describes 16 endpoints, nine-strategy content extraction, optional Tor-anonymized stack support, no API keys, no per-query fees, and no vendor lock-in. It is useful for developers building research agents, RAG systems, automation tools, or MCP-style assistants that need repeatable search and page extraction under their own control. AgentSearch is notable now because search is a core tool for autonomous agents, but hosted APIs can become costly or restrictive at scale. By packaging search and extraction as a self-hostable service, it gives builders a practical infrastructure option for private or cost-sensitive agent workflows.

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StackAI
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StackAI is an enterprise AI agent platform that enables organizations to build, deploy, and orchestrate AI agents across business workflows. The platform was recently acquired by Asana, signaling the convergence of task management and AI agent automation. StackAI's architecture includes three layers: AI Studio for agent design, AI Teammates for autonomous task execution, and the core StackAI engine that connects to hundreds of external systems. Agents can read, write, and execute across enterprise tools, making it useful for operations teams, IT departments, and business process owners who want to automate complex multi-step workflows without custom development. The Asana acquisition positions StackAI at the intersection of work management and AI agents, where task orchestration and autonomous execution converge. What makes it notable is the enterprise-grade integration breadth and the Asana backing that brings it to millions of existing work management users.

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Bolt
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Bolt.new is an innovative AI web development platform by StackBlitz, enabling users to create, run, edit, and deploy full-stack web applications directly from their browser without the need for local installations. By leveraging advanced AI technology, Bolt.new understands user requirements and swiftly generates high-quality code through natural conversation. This AI-powered web development agent streamlines the development process, offering a seamless experience for building software. Whether you are a seasoned developer or new to coding, Bolt.new empowers you to bring your ideas to life efficiently and effortlessly. Experience the future of web development with Bolt.news intuitive interface and cutting-edge functionalities.

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JumpFoundry
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JumpFoundry is a Hermes Agent plugin for creating editable TrueType fonts from one or two hand-drawn glyph examples. It uses parallel model calls to infer the rest of a typeface, generate coherent letterforms, and turn rough creative input into usable font files. Designers can prototype custom display fonts faster, founders can explore brand typography without a full type design process, and developers can experiment with generative creative workflows inside an agent runtime. Its main advantage is the very small input requirement: instead of asking users to draw a full alphabet, it expands a tiny seed sample into a complete, editable TTF output that can continue through normal design tooling.

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Claude Cowork
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Claude Cowork is an agentic AI workspace from Anthropic designed to complete multi-step knowledge work with less manual back-and-forth. Instead of stopping at suggestions, it can work through research, document creation, spreadsheet tasks, and app-based workflows while using connected files and tools to produce finished deliverables. That makes it useful for operators, analysts, team leads, and enterprise knowledge workers who need help with complex tasks that stretch beyond a single prompt. The product stands out by bringing the execution style of coding agents into business and productivity work, with role-based controls, observability, and workflow integrations aimed at serious organizational use. For teams exploring autonomous AI help for real office work, Claude Cowork offers a more action-oriented alternative to standard chat assistants.

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Protoclone
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Protoclone is a synthetic humanoid robotics program from Clone Robotics focused on building anatomically inspired robots for real-world physical tasks. The project sits at the intersection of embodied AI, advanced actuation, and next-generation robotics design, with a roadmap aimed at making humanoid systems more capable and commercially viable over time. It is most relevant for robotics researchers, investors, engineers, and technology watchers who want to track serious attempts to build highly human-like robotic platforms. Rather than positioning itself as a simple demo, Protoclone stands out through its ambitious emphasis on synthetic-muscle-style design, humanoid movement, and long-term practical deployment. For anyone exploring the frontier of consumer and industrial humanoids, Protoclone is an eye-catching robotics product that reflects how quickly the embodied AI category is evolving.

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cc-fleet
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cc-fleet is a Go-based CLI tool that lets developers spawn any vendor LLM — including DeepSeek, GLM, Qwen, Kimi, and MiniMax — as real Claude Code teammates or one-shot subagents. Instead of being locked into a single model provider for AI coding, cc-fleet enables multi-model agent workflows where different models handle different tasks based on their strengths. Developers can run Claude Code as the primary agent while delegating specific subtasks to cheaper or specialized models, creating a cost-effective multi-agent coding setup. The tool installs as a Claude Code plugin and handles model routing, session management, and agent communication. With 67 GitHub stars and Apache-2.0 licensing since May 2026, cc-fleet targets developers who want to optimize their AI coding costs while maintaining the Claude Code workflow they already use.

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re_gent
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re_gent is version control built specifically for AI coding agents. It records agent tool calls, file edits, prompts, sessions and command history so developers can audit exactly what an agent changed and roll back when a generated patch goes wrong. The CLI adds commands such as log, blame and session tracking around normal Claude Code-style work, making it useful for teams that are adopting autonomous coding but still need accountability. It is notable now because agent-written code is becoming harder to review with normal git history alone; re_gent adds provenance at the prompt and tool-call level rather than only at the final commit.

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skelm
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skelm is a TypeScript framework for secure, agentic workflows that mix deterministic code, LLM inference, and full agent loops. Instead of using a loose JSON workflow definition or ad hoc scripts, skelm lets developers author typed TypeScript modules while requiring permissions to be declared through a default-deny security model. It supports multi-backend agents and is designed to run anywhere Node runs, making it relevant for teams building production automation around LLMs. The tool is useful when a workflow needs both normal program logic and agent autonomy, but still needs operational boundaries. It is notable now because the May 2026 project emphasizes security and typed orchestration for long-running agent systems.

Tavus image-to-AI-human turns a static image into a realistic AI video persona for personalized messaging and interactive experiences. The platform helps teams generate AI humans, conversational video agents, and scalable personalized clips from a small amount of source material. Marketers can create individualized outreach, product educators can deliver human-style explanations, and developers can embed lifelike video interfaces into apps through Tavus APIs. Its strength is combining avatar generation, video synthesis, and developer-friendly infrastructure rather than treating AI video as a one-off creative export. Tavus is best for growth teams, customer-facing product teams, educators, and builders who want human-feeling video communication without recording every variation manually.

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MCPCore
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MCPCore is a browser-based IDE for building and deploying production-ready MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers. It combines AI code generation with one-click deployment, letting developers create MCP servers in minutes rather than hours. The platform provides a visual environment for defining tools, resources, and prompts that AI models can use, abstracting away the boilerplate of MCP server setup. MCPCore is designed for developers who want to extend AI assistants with custom capabilities — connecting them to internal APIs, databases, or proprietary workflows. Whether you're building your first MCP integration or managing multiple server deployments, MCPCore streamlines the entire development lifecycle from prototyping to production.

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ore-code
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ore-code is a DeepSeek-first desktop coding agent workbench built with TypeScript. It provides a native desktop interface for running AI coding agents with DeepSeek models as the primary backend, while supporting other model providers. The workbench targets developers who prefer local-first or cost-effective model providers over premium cloud APIs and want a polished desktop experience for AI-assisted coding. With 56 GitHub stars and MIT licensing since May 31, 2026, ore-code fills a gap between terminal-based agent CLIs and full IDE integrations. It offers structured workflows for code generation, refactoring, and debugging with persistent sessions. What makes it notable is the DeepSeek-first positioning: while most coding agents default to Anthropic or OpenAI, ore-code optimizes for DeepSeek's cost-performance ratio while remaining model-flexible.

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ContactLayer
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ContactLayer is a B2B contact-enrichment tool that turns professional profile URLs into verified work emails. Users upload LinkedIn or professional profile URLs in bulk, receive verified emails back, export a clean CSV, and pay only for successful matches. Today's X launch artifact specifically flagged new MCP support, positioning ContactLayer as a way for AI agents to enrich LinkedIn profiles, find verified B2B emails, qualify leads, and support outbound workflows from an assistant. It is useful for founders, sales teams, recruiters, growth operators, and agencies that need structured lead data without manual lookup. ContactLayer is notable because MCP is moving sales data enrichment from dashboards into callable agent tools.

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Keryx
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Keryx is a full-stack TypeScript framework where one typed action can be exposed across HTTP, WebSocket, CLI, MCP, and other transports. It is built for developers creating APIs, agent tools, internal services, and model-facing integrations who want a single action definition instead of repeatedly writing glue code for every interface. The framework is especially relevant to AI builders because MCP support makes actions usable by agents while the same logic can still serve conventional applications. Keryx is notable now because tool-calling infrastructure is becoming fragmented across chat clients, backend services, and agent runtimes. Its fresh Show HN launch and official documentation site make it a strong developer listing for agent-friendly application infrastructure.

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State Harness
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State Harness is a runtime safety monitor for multi-turn LLM agents. It watches token growth and interaction patterns during an agent loop, detects spirals or doomed tasks, trips a guardrail before a budget is burned, and produces an explanation without extra LLM calls. The tool is aimed at developers running autonomous agents, eval loops, or long-running workflows where context accumulation and repeated failure can waste money or hide operational problems. Its official repo includes a Rust core, Python SDK, PyPI package, and examples for wrapping an agent loop with a guard. State Harness is notable now because it launched on Show HN with a research-backed framing around Lyapunov-style stability for practical agent failure detection.

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Osaurus
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Osaurus is an open-source native macOS harness for running personal AI agents with local control over models, memory, tools and identity. Built in Swift and aimed at Apple Silicon users, it positions itself around owning your AI rather than routing every workflow through a hosted assistant. The repository highlights offline operation, persistent memory, autonomous execution and cryptographic identity, which makes it relevant for privacy-conscious developers and power users building long-running desktop agents. Osaurus is more than a chat wrapper: it is a local agent runtime and Mac application with strong GitHub traction and frequent releases. For Smartoolbox visitors, it fits the AI agents and productivity categories as a practical option for people who want a personal agent environment on their own machine.

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AgentSpan
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AgentSpan is a native agent runtime for Netflix Conductor OSS that brings autonomous AI execution into durable workflow orchestration. It targets developers and platform teams that already use workflow engines or need more reliable agent runs than a single prompt loop can provide. By integrating agent behavior with Conductor-style tasks, routing, retries, observability, and process structure, AgentSpan aims to make AI agents easier to operate inside real backend systems. The tool is notable now because many organizations are discovering that useful agents require runtime infrastructure, not just a model call and a chat UI. Its fresh Show HN launch, official GitHub repository, and README make the identity clear enough for ingestion as an agent-infrastructure developer tool.

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Mirage
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Mirage is a unified virtual filesystem for AI agents that mounts services such as S3, Google Drive, Slack, Gmail, Redis, GitHub, and local resources into one Unix-like tree. It is built for developers creating agents that need to move across many backends without learning a different SDK or custom MCP interface for every service. Agents can use familiar commands like cat, grep, cp, and jq over simulated files, making cross-service automation easier to reason about and test. Mirage is notable now because the repository launched recently, gained strong GitHub traction quickly, and targets a real pain point in agent infrastructure: giving LLMs a smaller, more reliable action surface while still exposing rich external systems.

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Browser Harness
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Browser Harness is an open-source browser-control harness that connects LLM agents directly to a real Chrome session through a thin, editable CDP layer. It is built for developers and operators who want Claude Code, Codex, or other agents to perform web tasks with fewer brittle abstractions than a fixed automation wrapper. The repository emphasizes self-healing behavior: when a helper is missing, the agent can write it into the workspace and reuse it later. That makes it useful for browser operations such as uploads, research workflows, admin panels, and repetitive SaaS tasks. It is notable now because the April 2026 launch has strong GitHub traction and sits directly in the fast-growing browser-agent ecosystem.

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Agent Trade Kit
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Agent Trade Kit is an open-source OKX MCP server and CLI that connects AI assistants such as Claude and Cursor to an OKX account through the Model Context Protocol. It is designed for developers and technically confident traders who want local, auditable agent access to trading-account actions rather than a black-box hosted bot. The TypeScript monorepo exposes exchange capabilities as tools that MCP-compatible assistants can call, making it relevant for portfolio monitoring, trade workflow experiments, and agentic finance prototypes. It deserves conservative handling because trading automation is high-risk, but the product identity is clear and useful. It is notable now because GitHub searches for new MCP projects showed strong early adoption and a focused real-world use case.

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Agentic OS
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Agentic OS by Injecting.ai is a platform for deploying AI agents into the channels and workflows a team already uses. The official homepage describes tools, knowledge, code execution, and teams on one operating layer for intelligence, making it relevant to companies that want agents in business operations rather than isolated chat experiments. It is aimed at founders, operators, and technical teams building internal agents that need communication surfaces, execution, and shared context. The Show HN launch positioned it as an operating system for AI agents, and the verified homepage provides a clear product identity beyond the launch post. For Smartoolbox visitors, Agentic OS fits the growing category of agent deployment platforms that package orchestration, collaboration, and operational controls into a product-like environment.

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MandoCode
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MandoCode is a local-first AI coding agent for .NET developers who want autonomous assistance without depending on cloud model APIs. The project runs as a C# CLI built with Semantic Kernel, RazorConsole and Ollama, so users can refactor code, inspect projects, propose diffs and run agent workflows with local models and no API keys. It fits developers working in Windows, Linux or cloud shells who prefer terminal workflows but want more safety than raw model-generated patches. Recent commits added web search and active documentation, and the Show HN launch surfaced it as a fresh local coding-agent option. For Smartoolbox users, MandoCode is most relevant as an open-source code assistant and agentic developer tool for privacy-conscious .NET teams.

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ParseBench
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ParseBench is a LlamaIndex benchmark for evaluating how well AI systems understand real-world documents with complex layouts. It focuses on dense tables, charts, structured pages, and messy business documents that often break simple text extraction pipelines. AI engineers, RAG builders, document automation teams, and evaluation researchers can use ParseBench to compare parsing approaches and identify weaknesses before deploying document agents in production. The benchmark is especially relevant for workflows involving financial reports, forms, enterprise PDFs, and knowledge-base ingestion. What makes ParseBench useful is its practical orientation: instead of testing clean toy documents, it targets the layout and reasoning problems that determine whether document AI works reliably in real business settings.

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Latch
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Latch is an AI-agent governance and access-control layer from Subzero Labs for delegating limited authority to agents without handing over raw, long-lived credentials. Its launch post describes a dashboard where developers define what an agent can do, set spending ceilings, bind access to specific hardware or trusted execution environments, simulate allow/deny behavior, proxy upstream credentials, and keep a verifiable log of everything touched. That makes it relevant for teams experimenting with Claude Code, financial agents, compliance-sensitive automations, or any workflow where API access should expire when a task ends. Latch is notable because it treats agent identity, budget control, policy simulation and auditability as one operational workflow. The X lead was selected only after official onlatch.com blog verification.

Vast.ai Startup Program offers early-stage companies $2,500 in free GPU credits to run AI training, fine-tuning, and inference workloads on Vast.ai's global GPU marketplace. The program targets startups that need affordable GPU compute without long-term contracts or enterprise commitments, giving them access to a distributed network of GPU providers at competitive prices. Vast.ai's marketplace model lets startups rent GPUs on demand, scale up during peak workloads, and avoid the capital expense of dedicated cloud GPU instances. For AI-first startups burning through compute budgets, the program provides a meaningful runway extension. What makes it stand out is the marketplace approach to GPU access — rather than relying on a single cloud provider, startups can tap into a distributed pool of hardware at lower costs.

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DocsAgent
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DocsAgent is a local-first document intelligence engine and MCP server that lets AI agents securely search and analyze private desktop files. It indexes local PDFs, Word documents, PowerPoint files and other office material so tools such as OpenClaw, Claude Code and Cursor can retrieve relevant context without uploading sensitive data to a cloud service. The project emphasizes privacy, native performance and agent compatibility, making it useful for researchers, consultants, engineers and knowledge workers with large local document collections. Instead of manually attaching files or pasting snippets into chat, users can expose a searchable personal knowledge layer to their AI workflows. DocsAgent is notable now as local MCP tooling becomes a practical bridge between private files and agentic assistants.

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CtxGov
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CtxGov is a local-first governance and context-audit toolkit for AI agents. It gives developers read-only tools to inspect the instructions, memory, and context an agent will inherit before it acts, helping teams catch unsafe, stale, or conflicting prompt state earlier in the workflow. That makes it relevant for builders using Claude Code, Codex-style agents, MCP tools, or custom agent harnesses where hidden context can materially change behavior. CtxGov appeared on Show HN on 2026-06-25 with the positioning “see what instructions your AI agent inherits before it runs.” The official GitHub repository describes local-first read-only tools for agent context, memory, and governance evaluation, making it a practical developer utility rather than only a discussion post.

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Proof Loop
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Proof Loop is a repo-local verification protocol that forces AI coding agents to prove work is actually finished. It freezes acceptance criteria before implementation, separates builder and verifier roles, records durable proof artifacts inside the repository, and refuses a done claim until every criterion has a fresh PASS verdict. Because the protocol is file-based rather than tied to one vendor, it can work with OpenClaw, Hermes, Codex, OpenCode, Claude Code, or any harness that reads and writes a repo. It is useful for developers, agencies, and multi-agent teams that are tired of confident but unverified agent claims. Proof Loop is timely because autonomous coding needs evidence-backed completion, not just plausible summaries.

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Timeglass
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Timeglass is an AI-powered knowledge platform that gives teams a persistent, queryable memory of everything happening inside their company. It is built for engineering, product, operations, and leadership teams whose institutional knowledge is scattered across Slack, GitHub, Notion, Linear, email, and meeting transcripts. Instead of relying on an employee to remember where a decision was documented, Timeglass continuously ingests work signals and lets anyone ask natural-language questions about projects, decisions, context, and status. That makes it especially useful during onboarding, cross-team handoffs, retrospectives, and executive reviews where missing context slows teams down. What makes Timeglass notable now is that it treats organizational memory as a first-class AI infrastructure problem rather than a search feature bolted onto a chatbot.

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Agent Browser Shield
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Agent Browser Shield is an open-source Chromium extension from PixieBrix that makes browser-using AI agents safer, faster, and less distractible. It ships more than 30 rules for stripping page chrome, hiding cookie banners and sponsored clutter, masking PII and credentials before they reach a model, and suppressing hidden text or user-generated content that could carry prompt-injection payloads. The extension is useful for developers running browser-use agents through tools such as OpenClaw, Hermes Agent, Browserbase, or custom automation stacks. It solves a practical issue in agentic web browsing: raw pages are noisy and sometimes hostile to agents. The tool is notable now because browser agents are moving from demos into real workflows, where token efficiency and prompt-injection resistance matter.

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April
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April is an AI executive assistant that lives in text messages and helps users manage reminders, schedules, everyday planning, and lightweight personal admin without requiring a dedicated app. The product is built around natural texting, so users can send quick, imperfect, context-light messages and still have April understand the intent, remember ongoing details, and keep track of what matters over time. It is designed to help with reminders, weather checks, local updates, list management, recipe lookups, and calendar-style coordination while feeling more like texting a person than operating software. The no-setup, no-app approach makes it especially approachable for users who want assistant-style help without learning another interface. For personal productivity and household coordination, April offers a conversational layer that stays persistent and easy to reach.

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Databox MCP
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Databox MCP is a Model Context Protocol server that connects AI assistants like Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini directly to business performance data in Databox. Launched on June 1, 2026 and ranked #3 on Product Hunt with 364 upvotes, it allows teams to query their centralized business metrics, KPIs, and dashboards using natural language inside their AI tools. Databox itself is an AI-powered business intelligence platform used by 20,000+ scaling businesses, featuring 130+ integrations, drag-and-drop dashboards, automated reporting, and an AI analyst called Genie. The MCP server bridges the gap between AI assistants and trusted performance data, enabling automated summaries, updates, and actions based on real business metrics rather than hallucinated data. It is particularly valuable for functional leaders, executives, and agencies who want AI to interact with their actual business data.

Microsoft AI deployment organization backed by $2.5B and 6,000 engineers to help customers deploy AI tools.

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MetaHarness
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MetaHarness, from the agent-harness-generator repository, mints a custom AI agent harness from an existing codebase or GitHub URL. It generates repo-aware CLI tooling, a local MCP server, project-scoped memory, skills based on the file layout, governance policy, release verification, and provenance-oriented scaffolding. The tool is for developers and teams who want repeatable, branded coding agents for serious repositories rather than a generic prompt pasted into a chat interface. It is notable now because the GitHub project appeared in recent MCP/AI-agent repository searches with a working Studio, npm-based CLI, documented architecture, and an explicit focus on turning ordinary repos into focused agent workspaces.

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Web Speed
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Web Speed is an agentic web adaptation layer that translates any website into high-fidelity, token-efficient machine maps for AI agents. It acts as a logic layer between web content and AI agents, converting complex website structures into clean, navigable data that agents can process without wasting tokens on HTML parsing. The platform targets developers building web-scraping agents, research assistants, and automation tools that need reliable access to website content without the fragility of raw HTML parsing. Featured on Show HN on June 8, 2026 with 7 points, Web Speed addresses a real pain point: as more agents interact with the web, the overhead of parsing inconsistent HTML becomes a significant cost and reliability problem. The MCP-native approach means it integrates directly with Claude Code, Cursor, and other MCP-compatible agents.

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Fireworks AI
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Fireworks AI is a high-performance inference platform for deploying and scaling AI models at production speed. The platform offers optimized serving for open-source LLMs with sub-100ms latency, supporting popular models and custom fine-tuned variants. Fireworks AI handles infrastructure complexity with auto-scaling, A/B testing, and production-grade reliability for engineering teams building AI-powered applications. It supports rapid model deployment without managing GPU infrastructure, offering cost-effective inference at enterprise scale. Recently reported raising at a $15B valuation, reflecting strong demand for efficient AI inference solutions. Fireworks AI is ideal for developers and platform teams who need fast, reliable, and scalable model serving for production workloads.

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Reloops
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Reloops is an open-source creative asset workspace for teams and AI agents. It positions itself as an alternative to brand asset managers, review tools, shared drives and internal digital asset management systems, with workflows for organizing creative assets, generating AI descriptions, collaborating on reviews, and keeping design or marketing files accessible to both humans and agents. The tool is useful for creative teams, marketers, agencies, and product teams that need one searchable workspace for assets rather than scattered folders and comment threads. Reloops fits Smartoolbox because AI agents increasingly need structured access to media libraries when producing campaigns, demos, videos or design variants. Its fresh open-source launch and official app homepage make it a qualified candidate rather than just a repository demo.

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Salesforce Agentforce
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Salesforce Agentforce is an enterprise agent platform for building AI agents that work across sales, service, marketing, commerce, and internal operations. It lets organizations create agents that can answer questions, take actions, use business data, and operate inside Salesforce workflows with governance and enterprise controls. Customer support teams, revenue organizations, admins, and enterprise automation leaders can use Agentforce to automate repetitive customer and employee interactions while keeping them connected to CRM records and business processes. The platform is strongest for companies already invested in Salesforce infrastructure. What makes Agentforce distinctive is its tight integration with Salesforce data and workflow permissions, allowing AI agents to act in business context rather than functioning as isolated assistants.

Technology that assigns a dedicated AI agent to each customer for hyper‑personalized outreach at scale.

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Miso One
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Miso One is an AI text-to-speech model designed to generate expressive spoken audio with low latency. It targets use cases where voice output needs to feel responsive, such as conversational agents, interactive apps, narration workflows, accessibility features, and real-time product experiences. The model is described as an 8B TTS system with latency around 110 milliseconds, which makes it interesting for builders who need speech generation that can keep pace with live interaction rather than only offline audio production. Developers, AI product teams, and voice interface designers can use Miso One to experiment with natural-sounding responses at speed. Its differentiator is the combination of expressive voice quality and realtime-oriented performance.

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Opplic
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Opplic is an AI growth employee platform built specifically for web agencies that manage many client sites. Instead of generating standalone copy or reports, it learns each client’s business, spots missed demand, opens plain-English Growth PRs, and coordinates website updates with matching Instagram, LinkedIn, Google, and SEO campaign work after agency approval. The product is useful for small and mid-sized agencies that want to show measurable lead and revenue impact without hiring a separate growth team per account. It surfaced through a July 3 Show HN launch and the official homepage verifies a complete agency workflow: client workspaces, approval gates, campaign publishing, reporting, playbook reuse, white-label delivery, and per-client pricing. That makes it a practical AI-agent productivity listing rather than a generic marketing assistant.

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Meta Muse Spark
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Meta Muse Spark is a Meta AI model layer powering multimodal assistant experiences across voice, shopping, visual recognition, and camera based interactions. It is designed for real time understanding tasks where an assistant needs to reason over speech, images, product context, and user intent rather than only answer text prompts. Builders and AI watchers can use it as a signal for Meta's direction in consumer AI, smart glasses, and embedded assistant workflows. The model is most relevant to teams tracking multimodal interfaces, retail assistance, and conversational AI features inside large platforms. Its differentiator is tight integration with Meta's apps and devices, giving it distribution channels beyond a standalone chatbot or API benchmark.

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Gobii
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Gobii is an AI agent platform built around always-on virtual coworkers that can browse the web, collect information, and deliver useful work without needing constant prompting. The product positions each agent as having its own identity, memory, and tool access, which makes it more suited to ongoing research, monitoring, and repetitive online tasks than a standard chat assistant. Teams can use Gobii to automate web-based workflows such as lead research, market scanning, data gathering, and scheduled reporting while keeping the interaction model simple through messaging. For people who want AI help that feels persistent rather than session-based, Gobii offers a practical way to delegate browser-heavy work to agents that stay active in the background and return results when needed.

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Khazad
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Khazad is a transparent semantic cache for LLM API calls that sits at the transport layer and replays semantically equivalent responses from Redis Vector Sets. Developers can add it without changing application code, then reduce repeated upstream calls, lower latency on cache hits, and cut model spend for workloads with recurring prompts or similar conversations. The README emphasizes model-aware and conversation-aware matching, so cached answers are scoped safely by provider/model and full message history rather than only by the last prompt. That makes Khazad a practical infrastructure tool for AI SaaS teams, internal copilots, RAG systems, and high-volume agent workflows where cost control matters. It was discovered through a fresh Show HN LLM query and verified against its official GitHub repository and PyPI-linked documentation.

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BotBoard
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BotBoard is a task management platform purpose-built for AI agent workflows. Unlike traditional project management tools designed around human collaboration, BotBoard lets AI agents directly pick up tasks, post status updates, and mark work complete — creating a shared workspace where humans and autonomous agents collaborate seamlessly. Developers and teams can define structured work queues, monitor agent progress in real time, and intervene when needed. BotBoard is ideal for teams running multi-agent pipelines, automation workflows, or AI-assisted development cycles. It bridges the gap between human oversight and autonomous execution, making it easier to delegate repetitive tasks to agents while maintaining full visibility into what's being done and why.

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Nilbox
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Nilbox is an open-source desktop GUI sandbox for running AI agents and MCP servers without handing those agents your API keys. The project targets developers experimenting with Claude Desktop, Cursor, Codex-style agents, local MCP tools, and browser or desktop automation that needs safer boundaries. Its core pitch is a “Zero Token Architecture”: secrets stay in the desktop app while the agent works through scoped tools, reducing the chance that credentials are copied into prompts, logs, or model context. The official GitHub repository describes it as a sandbox for AI agents and MCP servers, and the same repo was linked from a fresh Show HN launch. It is early, but directly useful for anyone hardening local agent workflows.

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Agent Desktop
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Agent Desktop is a native desktop automation CLI for AI agents built around the loop of observing, deciding, and acting on a user’s machine. It gives developers a way to connect agent workflows to desktop-level interactions instead of only web APIs or terminal commands. The project is relevant for builders working on computer-use agents, local automation, testing, and workflows where an assistant must inspect screen state and perform real actions. Agent Desktop is notable now because desktop automation is becoming a core frontier for practical agents, but many tools remain browser-only or cloud-only. Its Show HN listing and official GitHub README provide enough evidence to classify it as a developer-oriented AI agent automation tool.

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CapaKit
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CapaKit is a free macOS runtime and CLI toolkit for building, testing, and running AI app Kits inside isolated sandboxes. It is aimed at developers using coding agents to generate workflows, MCP servers, Codex skills, and small applications without letting build scripts or generated code inherit broad host access. Unlike tools that only isolate the final run phase, CapaKit sandboxes both build and runtime, blocks network by default, avoids inherited environment variables, and resolves secrets on demand. Kits can expose web UIs, MCP endpoints, tests, and installable skills, which makes the tool useful for safer agent-built app lifecycles. Its June Show HN launch and official docs position it as timely infrastructure for teams worried about agent-generated code touching files, secrets, or networks too freely.

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Gradial
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Gradial is an agentic marketing platform that automates enterprise marketing workflows across content operations, campaign execution, and digital experience updates. It helps marketing teams coordinate repetitive production tasks, connect systems, and use AI agents to move work through brand and approval processes faster. The platform is designed for enterprise marketers, digital experience teams, and agencies managing complex websites or campaign pipelines. Gradial stands out by focusing on operational marketing automation rather than one-off content generation. Its agentic approach is useful for teams that need to scale updates, maintain consistency, and reduce manual coordination across the tools already used to run marketing programs.

Terraform Review Agent is a reusable GitHub Action that reviews Terraform pull requests with a LangGraph multi-agent system. It checks infrastructure changes for security, cost, style, and operational issues, then posts a single severity-ranked comment instead of scattering noisy bot output across the PR. The project targets platform teams, DevOps engineers, SREs, and infrastructure-heavy startups that want AI-assisted IaC review without building their own reviewer from scratch. Its official repository verifies Python 3.13, strict typing, Docker packaging, CI workflows, and LLM-provider support. It is notable now because code-review agents are moving beyond application code into infrastructure, where misconfigured Terraform can create security exposure, bill shock, and production drift.

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Dead Simple Email
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Dead Simple Email is an email API built specifically for AI agents that need reliable inboxes, outbound mail, webhooks, and threading without using fragile personal Gmail accounts or complex SMTP setup. Developers can create inboxes through an API, receive real-time webhook notifications, send messages programmatically, manage custom domains, and use scoped API keys for multi-tenant agent workflows. It is useful for builders creating support agents, sales agents, research agents, testing environments, or automation systems that need email as a first-class tool. The Show HN launch is timely because agents increasingly need safe external communication channels, and email remains one of the hardest interfaces to automate cleanly at scale.

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SmolFS
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SmolFS is an open-source durable workspace layer for AI agents. It gives coding and automation agents persistent folders that can survive beyond a single run, with CLI lifecycle commands plus Python and TypeScript SDKs advertised in the repository. That solves a practical problem for agent builders: agents often create temporary files, intermediate artifacts and generated project state that are easy to lose or hard to coordinate across sessions. By packaging durable workspaces as a focused filesystem primitive, SmolFS is relevant to teams building agent runtimes, coding copilots, sandbox managers or long-running automation systems. It is notable now because the Show HN launch appeared the day after the repository creation, and the official README presents real installation, SDK and release material.

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Atlassian Rovo
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Atlassian Rovo is an agentic AI product for finding, understanding and acting on company knowledge across Atlassian tools and connected workplace systems. It helps teams search scattered information, ask questions about projects, create summaries and use AI agents to automate recurring collaboration tasks. Rovo is useful for product, engineering, support and operations teams already working in Jira, Confluence and related Atlassian workflows. It stands out because it brings AI agents directly into a mature work-management ecosystem with permissions, context and team data already in place. The product is less about generic chat and more about turning organizational knowledge into actions inside team workflows.

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Failproof AI
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Failproof AI is a local agent failure-handling layer for developers running Claude Code, Codex, Gemini CLI, GitHub Copilot, picode, opencode, and similar coding agents. It watches tool calls and agent behavior for common failure modes such as nonexistent files, hallucinated commands, destructive actions, loops, context drift, and transient errors, then blocks or retries with corrective context before the run derails. The homepage verifies a free npm install, GitHub repository, docs, and a set of 39 built-in policies with no added latency and local-only processing. It is notable now because today’s X launch artifact flagged its first public demo, and the product page positions it squarely at the growing reliability gap around autonomous coding agents.

Reflect by Starlight Search is a feedback and adaptation layer for teams building self-improving AI agents. Instead of treating every run as a blank slate, Reflect ingests signals from users or LLM-as-judge evaluations, reasons about what worked, and plans trajectories that help an agent adapt over time. It is aimed at developers, AI product teams, and agent-platform builders who need a structured way to close the loop between outputs, judgments, and future behavior. The tool is notable now because agent builders are moving from prompt-only demos toward systems that learn from production feedback. Its recent Show HN launch and official product page position Reflect as infrastructure for agent iteration rather than another chatbot front end.

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Auxilius.ai
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Auxilius.ai is an agentic AI compliance platform that turns regulatory controls, policies, and risk checks into executable code. Instead of managing compliance through static documents and manual review cycles, teams can define controls as living logic that updates when regulations, internal policies, or business rules change. The product is aimed at enterprises that need faster, more reliable regulatory coverage across finance, risk, and operations workflows. Auxilius.ai uses coding agents to help automate control implementation, reduce repetitive compliance work, and keep audit-ready logic aligned with current requirements. For organizations dealing with fast-moving regulatory environments, it offers a practical way to make compliance more continuous, testable, and operationally useful.

GitLab Duo Agent Platform brings agentic AI workflows into GitLab for planning, coding, reviewing, securing, and shipping software from one DevSecOps workspace. It helps engineering teams automate repetitive development tasks, summarize project context, generate code suggestions, analyze vulnerabilities, and coordinate AI agents around existing repositories and issues. The platform is aimed at software teams that want AI assistance without moving work out of GitLab or stitching together separate tools for code, CI, security, and collaboration. Its main advantage is the tight connection between AI agents and the full software delivery lifecycle, giving developers and team leads context-aware help across code, pipelines, merge requests, and project management instead of isolated chat prompts.

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Guru
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Guru is a governed company knowledge platform that gives AI tools verified, up-to-date internal context. It centralizes documentation, answers, and institutional knowledge so employees and AI assistants can retrieve trusted information instead of guessing from stale files or scattered chat threads. The platform is useful for customer support, sales enablement, operations, onboarding, and any team trying to make internal AI workflows reliable. Its core advantage is governance: Guru emphasizes verified knowledge, source-backed answers, and maintenance workflows that keep information current. For Smartoolbox users, Guru is best understood as a productivity layer that makes workplace AI more useful by improving the knowledge it depends on.

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Browserbase
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Browserbase is a cloud browser platform that gives AI agents reliable, programmable browsers for real web tasks. It helps agents browse dynamic sites, handle changing layouts, manage sessions, work around common automation obstacles, and run browser workflows at scale. Developers can use Browserbase to build research agents, web automation systems, testing workflows, data collection tools, and customer-facing agent features that need actual browser execution rather than simple HTTP requests. The platform is especially useful for teams building agent infrastructure because it abstracts away browser orchestration, scaling, and reliability problems while keeping the browser environment accessible to modern AI workflows.

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FactIQ Plugin
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FactIQ Plugin turns Claude Code and Codex into finance and macroeconomic analysts with direct access to FactIQ’s real-time economy and market data. The official repository packages a skill, MCP server, slash command, domain playbooks, SQL guidance, chart/report publishing tools, and OAuth authentication so an agent can discover series, query official datasets, compute derived metrics, and publish shareable charts or reports. It is useful for analysts, researchers, finance teams, and developers who want coding agents to answer questions about SEC filings, earnings calls, central-bank data, IMF, World Bank, China, India, Korea, and live markets without manually stitching data sources together. Its July Show HN launch makes it fresh, while the MIT repository gives enough concrete install and workflow detail for Smartoolbox.

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Fundraisly
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Fundraisly is an AI-powered fundraising agent that helps startup founders find investors, automate outreach, and book qualified meetings directly onto their calendars. With a database of 300,000+ verified investors aggregated from over 15 sources, Fundraisly uses AI-powered matching to connect startups with the right leads based on funding stage, market sector, and geography. The platform automates warm introduction path mapping across Gmail, Outlook, and LinkedIn, and launches cold outreach campaigns targeting 40,000+ VC funds. Ranked #1 on Product Hunt for June 2026, Fundraisly has helped 200+ startups raise over $1.1B collectively, with a guaranteed 10-50 qualified investor meetings within 90 days. It is the go-to tool for founders who want to offload the manual grind of fundraising and focus on building their product.

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Gas City
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Gas City is an AI software factory workflow for running large numbers of coding agents in parallel. The concept focuses on coordinating more than one hundred agents so teams can explore many implementation paths, review outputs, and compress software development experiments into shorter cycles. Engineering leaders, AI-native startups, research teams, and developers experimenting with agent swarms can use Gas City as a reference model for scaling coding-agent throughput beyond a single assistant session. It is best suited for advanced teams comfortable with orchestration, evaluation, and human review. What makes Gas City distinctive is its parallelism: instead of treating an agent as one helper, it frames software production as a managed fleet of specialized automated contributors.

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Honen
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Honen is an AI course-creation platform for teams that need to turn existing knowledge into training people will actually finish. Its official page says users can upload docs, call recordings, kickoff videos, or even start from a topic, then generate a full course in multiple formats such as readings, video, flashcards, podcasts, quizzes, lectures, games, music, and comics, with a built-in one-to-one AI tutor. The tool fits learning, onboarding, enablement, and internal documentation workflows where teams have material but not instructional design bandwidth. It was selected from today’s X launch leads after verifying the official Honen homepage and structured SoftwareApplication data, which makes it a stronger candidate than the ambiguous tweet-only training-agent lead.

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Zano
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Zano is a collaborative workspace where humans and AI agents work together in shared channels, similar to Slack with persistent AI teammates. Each agent runs as a Claude Code process on the user’s own machine through a local bridge, keeps its own working directory and memory, and communicates through chats, DMs, threads and a task board. The hosted web app uses Supabase for realtime collaboration while the bridge spawns local agents. Zano is aimed at teams experimenting with agent coworkers rather than one-off chat sessions. It is notable now because many teams need a social coordination layer for agents: assignments, reviews, threads and persistent team memory.

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Open Computer Use
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Open Computer Use is an open-source alternative to Codex Computer Use for running computer-control agent workflows outside a closed hosted product. The official repository describes a practical computer-use stack with English and Chinese documentation, release artifacts, and instructions for experimenting with agents that operate a desktop environment. It is aimed at developers, researchers, and automation builders who want to inspect, modify, or self-host the pieces behind browser and desktop-use agents. The project is notable now because computer-use has become one of the most important frontiers for practical AI agents, but many implementations remain proprietary. Open Computer Use gives Smartoolbox visitors a transparent starting point for learning, benchmarking, or building their own computer-use workflows.

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oh-my-kimi
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oh-my-kimi is a multi-agent orchestration harness for Kimi Code CLI. It turns Kimi into a bounded coding team with worktree-isolated lanes, DAG and ensemble planning, MCP and skill hooks, local graph memory, a live cockpit, and evidence gates before work is accepted as complete. The tool is designed for developers who use Kimi Code but need stronger coordination, verification and run visibility than a single prompt loop provides. It solves common agent failure modes such as premature “done” claims, context drift and unsafe parallel edits. It is notable now because Kimi’s coding ecosystem is growing quickly and OMK packages orchestration patterns into a practical CLI.

Hi HN,<p>I built an open-source AI agent that has already indexed and can search the entire Epstein files, roughly 100M words of publicly released documents.<p>The goal was simple: make a large, messy corpus of PDFs and text files immediately searchable in a precise way, without relying on keyword search or bloated prompts.<p>What it does:<p>- The full dataset is already indexed - You can ask natural language questions - Answers are grounded and include direct references to source documents - Supports both exact text lookup and semantic search<p>Discussion around these files is often fragmented. This makes it possible to explore the primary sources directly and verify claims without manually digging through thousands of pages.<p>Happy to answer questions or go into technical details.<p>Code: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nozomio-labs&#x2F;nia-epstein-ai" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;nozomio-labs&#x2F;nia-epstein-ai</a>

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TruLayer
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TruLayer is an observability and reliability platform for production LLM applications and AI agents. It combines real-time tracing, eval-rule-backed failure detection, incident-style analysis, human approval gates, retries, and rollback controls so teams can turn bad model behavior into a closed feedback loop instead of a manual debugging scramble. The tool is aimed at AI engineering teams shipping customer-facing agents, RAG apps, and workflow automations where latency, correctness, policy compliance, and regressions matter. It appeared today as a Show HN launch for tracing, evals, and a control loop for production LLMs. The official homepage confirms developer-oriented positioning around production AI failures, automated evaluation, and self-healing controls.

Databricks Agent Bricks is an enterprise platform for building, evaluating, and governing AI agents on company data. It helps teams connect agents to governed Databricks data, optimize behavior against real tasks, and deploy workflows that can use frontier models inside existing analytics and security controls. The platform is built for data teams, AI engineers, and enterprises that need production-grade agent systems rather than isolated demos. Its advantage is the tight link between agent development, data governance, evaluation, and Databricks’ broader lakehouse environment, giving organizations a clearer path from prototype to monitored business automation.

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Sifter
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Sifter is a CV ranking tool that uses pairwise comparison powered by large language models to help recruiters, hiring managers, and HR teams evaluate job candidates more consistently. Instead of relying on keyword matching or manual scanning, Sifter presents side-by-side comparisons of anonymized candidate profiles and learns the evaluator's preferences through repeated choices. That approach helps reduce the bias and inconsistency that come from rushing through hundreds of applications. The tool is designed for high-volume hiring scenarios where traditional applicant tracking systems surface too many results or miss qualified candidates. Sifter launched on Show HN and the official homepage at sifter.sh confirms a working product with a clear pairwise ranking interface. It fits the emerging category of AI-native HR and recruitment workflow tools.

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Lume
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Lume is a domestic robotics product from Syncere that combines home decor and household automation in a single lamp-shaped robot. It is designed to blend into living spaces while helping with repetitive chores such as laundry folding, which makes it more approachable than industrial-looking home robots. The product is aimed at consumers who want practical robotic assistance without turning their home into a lab or workshop. Lume stands out because it packages robotics into a familiar object instead of asking users to adopt a visibly mechanical machine. For early adopters, smart home enthusiasts, and people interested in consumer robotics, Lume represents a distinctive take on home automation focused on everyday usefulness, aesthetic integration, and a more natural fit inside modern homes.

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MobileRun
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MobileRun is a mobile-device automation platform that gives AI agents access to real phones rather than simulated browser tabs. Developers can plug Claude, Hermes, OpenClaw, or MobileRun’s hosted virtual assistant into Android and iOS devices, then automate apps through screen reading, taps, swipes, typing, SMS, webhooks, SDK/API calls, and natural language tasks. It is aimed at teams building mobile agents, creator/account workflows, messaging automation, app data pipelines, and QA or operational flows that only work on real devices with real identities and networks. The official homepage and docs show local open-source framework roots plus managed cloud phones, physical phone options, fleet scaling, and enterprise infrastructure, making it a timely AI-agent infrastructure listing.

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AgentCarousel
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AgentCarousel is an open-source testing framework for AI agents, described as unit tests for agent behavior. It helps builders define behavioral cases, run agents against structured fixtures, capture evidence, and publish signed results that make agent behavior easier to audit. The project is useful for teams moving from demo agents to production workflows where regressions, compliance claims, and prompt or tool changes need repeatable verification. Instead of relying only on ad hoc human review, AgentCarousel turns expected behavior into executable checks that can live alongside normal development workflows. The repository is actively maintained, had a June Show HN launch, and includes documentation around compliance reports and bundle publishing, making it a strong fit for Smartoolbox’s AI-agent and developer-tool categories.

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Lite Agent
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Lite Agent is a privacy-first AI browser copilot that runs as an extension and can click, type, remember context and talk through tasks inside the user’s browser. It is aimed at people who want agentic assistance on ordinary websites without handing every workflow to a remote desktop or a heavyweight automation stack. The product page positions it as a lighter browser-native agent, making it useful for form filling, web research, repetitive navigation and small personal productivity tasks. It surfaced today through a Show HN launch and has a verified official homepage with a clear product explanation, which makes it a timely fit for Smartoolbox’s AI Agents and Productivity categories.

ponytail, a lightweight open-source tool that layers a 'chill senior dev' persona onto AI coding agents (like Claude). It makes the model pause, think like an experienced engineer, and aggressively cut unnecessary code before generating anything.

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Evonic
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Evonic is an open-source agentic AI platform for designing, deploying, and orchestrating agents across local, remote, and cloud execution environments. The framework lets builders define an agent's model, tools, knowledge base, channels, skills, and workplace, then compose multi-agent systems with first-class agent-to-agent communication. It is aimed at developers building production agent workflows that need distributed execution, coordination, identity, state, and guardrails rather than one-off prompt scripts. Evonic is notable because its recent GitHub launch combines agent design, swarm orchestration, workplace abstraction, and mal-activity detection into one coherent platform. For teams experimenting with agent infrastructure, it offers a broader operating layer than a narrow MCP utility.

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Workplane
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Workplane is a collaborative filesystem designed for humans and AI agents to work together as peers. It lets teams share AI-generated artifacts — code, documents, data, designs, and other outputs — alongside human-created content in a unified workspace. The platform is aimed at development teams, product teams, and organizations integrating AI agents into their workflows who need a shared layer where both human and AI contributions are versioned, organized, and accessible. Instead of agents dumping output into chat logs or ephemeral files, Workplane provides persistent, structured storage that both humans and agents can read from and write to. It launched on Hacker News with 5 points and the official homepage at workplane.co describes sharing AI artifacts with humans and agents. The collaborative filesystem model addresses a growing infrastructure gap in multi-agent and human-AI team workflows.

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Thunderbit MCP Server
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Thunderbit MCP Server is an open-source toolkit that connects AI assistants to Thunderbit's web-scraping and structured-extraction capabilities. The monorepo ships a command-line tool, an MCP server with multiple tools, and a Claude Code plugin, all backed by Thunderbit's API. It is aimed at developers and AI-agent users who want Claude Desktop, Cursor, Cline, Claude Code, or scripted workflows to extract pages, distill information, and run batch scraping jobs through a standard tool interface. It is notable now because the repository was newly surfaced in May 2026 GitHub MCP searches and packages a commercial web-data product into agent-friendly CLI and MCP layers rather than just a browser UI.

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SerpApi
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SerpApi is a search API that gives applications and AI agents structured access to Google and other search engine results. It can return data from organic results, AI Overviews, Maps, Shopping, Knowledge Graph panels, images, news, and other search surfaces without developers needing to maintain brittle scraping infrastructure. AI builders, SEO teams, data analysts, and automation developers can use SerpApi to add live web context, competitive research, local search data, and product intelligence to their workflows. The service is especially useful when agents need current information from search rather than static training data. What makes SerpApi stand out is its coverage and reliability: it turns messy search pages into predictable API responses that are easier to plug into production systems.

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CodeHelm
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CodeHelm lets developers run Codex locally while controlling the session from Discord on a phone or browser. The local daemon manages Codex sessions and exposes approval, resume, interrupt, and monitoring actions through a Discord thread, which turns remote oversight into a lightweight control surface instead of forcing developers to sit at the terminal. It is for people who already use agentic coding tools and want safer long-running work, quick approvals, or mobile supervision while away from the workstation. CodeHelm fits the broader shift from one-shot code generation toward persistent coding sessions that need human-in-the-loop controls. The npm package, README, and setup docs make it a usable tool rather than just a concept.

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Goose
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Goose is a general-purpose AI agent that runs locally on your machine for code, workflows, research, writing, automation, data analysis, and more. It provides a native desktop app for macOS, Linux, and Windows, a full CLI for terminal workflows, and an API to embed it anywhere. Built in Rust for performance and portability, Goose works with 15+ providers including Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Ollama, OpenRouter, Azure, and Bedrock. Users can connect API keys or use existing Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini subscriptions via ACP (Agent Communication Protocol). Goose supports 70+ extensions via the Model Context Protocol (MCP) open standard and is now part of the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) at the Linux Foundation.

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Upskill
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Upskill is an open-source CLI and agent skill for searching, inspecting, reporting on, and publishing skills from the Autoloops upskill registry. It is built for people operating AI agents who need reusable task capabilities rather than one-off prompt snippets. From a shell or compatible agent environment, users can discover available skills, inspect metadata, and publish new packages into a registry workflow. That is useful for teams standardizing agent behavior across Cursor, Claude-style agents, automation scripts, or internal assistants. Upskill is notable now because it surfaced as a fresh Show HN AI-agent launch while the broader agent ecosystem is converging on portable skill libraries and registries as a way to make autonomous systems more reliable.

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Mog
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Mog is an open-source spreadsheet engine, app runtime, and SDK for building workbook-aware agents, automations, and embedded spreadsheet experiences. The official repository describes a TypeScript/Rust stack with a Node SDK, React embeds, web components, formulas, and headless workbook automation. It is useful for developers building AI apps that need reliable spreadsheet state, formulas, cells, and previews rather than brittle CSV hacks. The project is timely because spreadsheet interfaces remain central to business workflows, while AI agents increasingly need to read, manipulate, and embed workbook-like data structures. Smartoolbox visitors get a developer-oriented automation platform with a live demo, package-oriented SDK path, and enough documentation to evaluate real integration potential.

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Fin / Intercom
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Fin is Intercom's AI customer service agent that handles support conversations autonomously, resolving customer issues without human intervention. It integrates with existing help centers and knowledge bases to provide accurate, context-aware responses. Designed for customer support teams at SaaS companies who want to reduce response times and scale support operations without proportionally increasing headcount.

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Agent-evals
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Agent-evals is a Claude Code skill that helps developers build practical evaluations for their own AI agents instead of relying on vague manual checks. The official repository positions it as an eval engineer that can create datasets, test cases, rubrics, and repeatable evaluation workflows around a target agent. It is useful for agent builders, AI product teams, and engineering leads who need to know whether prompt, tool, or model changes improve behavior without breaking important workflows. Agent-evals is notable now because many teams are shipping agents faster than they can measure them. By packaging evaluation design as a reusable coding-agent skill, it fits directly into the developer loop where agent quality issues are discovered and fixed.

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skills-manage
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skills-manage is a Tauri desktop app for managing AI coding-agent skills across Claude Code, Cursor, Gemini CLI, Codex and more than twenty related platforms. It creates a central skills directory, installs skills into specific tools through symlinks, previews Markdown details, supports collections, and can scan projects for local skill libraries. This helps developers avoid duplicating prompts and agent capabilities across every CLI, IDE and assistant they use. The project is open source and explicitly follows the Agent Skills pattern, making it practical for teams standardizing reusable agent workflows. It is notable now because it is a recently created GitHub project with strong early traction and a clear release channel.

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Cognee v1.0
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Cognee v1.0 is an open-source memory layer for building AI agents that need structured context, recall, and knowledge graph support. It helps developers turn documents, conversations, and application data into retrievable memory that agents can use across workflows instead of relying only on short prompt context. Teams can use it for agentic research systems, customer-support copilots, internal knowledge assistants, and long-running automation where factual grounding matters. It is aimed at AI engineers, startup builders, and product teams experimenting with reliable agent infrastructure. Cognee stands out by combining agent memory, data ingestion, graph-style organization, and open-source deployment options in a focused developer platform.

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Vercel AI Gateway
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Vercel AI Gateway is a unified model-routing layer that gives developers a single API to access leading AI models including the newly available grok-build-0.1 from xAI. It handles authentication, rate limiting, failover, and billing across providers so teams can switch models without rewriting integration code. The gateway is optimized for production workloads, offering latency-aware routing and cost visibility through the Vercel dashboard. Developers building AI-powered features on Next.js or other Vercel-deployed frameworks benefit from tight platform integration and edge-optimized inference paths. What makes Vercel AI Gateway distinctive is the combination of provider-agnostic model access, built-in observability, and native deployment on one of the most popular frontend infrastructure platforms.

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Multiplayer
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Multiplayer is a debugging agent that connects directly to production environments to help developers fix application bugs automatically. It runs locally alongside popular coding agents like Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex, injecting real production context — logs, traces, metrics, and system state — into the agent's debugging workflow. Instead of developers manually reproducing bugs and copying error messages into chat, Multiplayer observes the production system, identifies the root cause, and feeds actionable context to the coding agent so it can propose and verify fixes. The tool is aimed at engineering teams who ship frequently and need to reduce the time between bug detection and resolution. What makes Multiplayer notable is its local-first architecture: it bridges the gap between production observability tools and AI coding agents without requiring cloud-based debugging infrastructure, eliminating PR slop by grounding agent fixes in real system behavior.

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Viktor
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Viktor is an AI coworker for Slack and Microsoft Teams that helps teams delegate operational work from the chat tools they already use. It connects through OAuth to thousands of apps, understands requests in conversation, and can execute real tasks instead of simply answering questions. Teams can use Viktor to coordinate follow-ups, move information between tools, draft updates, trigger workflows, and reduce the amount of manual context switching that slows daily work. It is designed for startups, operations teams, sales teams, and knowledge workers who live in messaging platforms. Viktor stands out by positioning itself as a hire-like teammate inside collaboration channels, combining workplace context, tool access, and proactive task execution in one chat-native agent.

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Inngest
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Inngest is a durable workflow platform for building reliable background jobs, event-driven systems, and production AI agents. It helps developers define functions that can pause, retry, recover, and coordinate long-running work without hand-rolling queues or brittle orchestration logic. Engineering teams use Inngest for agent harnesses, asynchronous workflows, scheduled jobs, webhook processing, and complex product automations that need observability and failure handling. It is especially valuable for teams moving AI prototypes into production, where agents need state, retries, and predictable execution rather than a simple request-response loop. What makes Inngest distinctive is its developer-first approach to reliability: it treats workflows as code while providing the durability and visibility usually associated with heavier orchestration systems.

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RobotoMail
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RobotoMail is email infrastructure built specifically for AI agents that need to send and receive messages through an API. It lets builders create mailboxes, manage domains, send outbound email, and process inbound messages without wiring up SMTP, OAuth flows, or a human-oriented inbox. The product fits developers creating autonomous support agents, workflow bots, lead-routing systems, research assistants, or any agent that needs a durable email identity. Its homepage offers REST API, CLI, dashboard, free tier, and pricing, which makes it more production-ready than a simple demo. RobotoMail is timely because agent workflows increasingly need ordinary communication channels, and email remains one of the hardest to automate safely with clean credentials and inbox state.

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Kimi API
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Kimi API gives developers programmatic access to Moonshot AI’s Kimi models for building coding assistants, agent workflows, chat products, and long-context applications. The platform is aimed at builders who need hosted model endpoints rather than a consumer chat interface, with quota-based usage and support for the newer Kimi coding model family. Teams can use it to prototype AI features, connect Kimi to internal tools, or benchmark Kimi against other model providers in software development workflows. Its main appeal is the combination of Kimi’s agentic coding push, large-context model positioning, and a direct API surface for production integrations.

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TinySearch
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TinySearch is an open-source web-access utility for local and small LLMs that need search results without dumping huge pages into context. It shrinks web content into compact, agent-friendly material so smaller models can browse, answer, or research with less token waste. The project is useful for local-AI users, developers building lightweight assistants, and anyone trying to make web retrieval practical on constrained hardware or cheaper models. It solves a common retrieval problem: normal search and page scraping can overwhelm context windows or bury the useful facts. TinySearch’s fresh Show HN launch is relevant because efficient tool use matters more as people run more capable AI workflows locally instead of only through large hosted models.

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Unyly MCP Marketplace
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Unyly MCP Marketplace is a directory-style marketplace for Model Context Protocol servers, pitched as an app store for AI tools that can connect to Claude, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline and Claude Code. It gives agent users a place to discover MCP servers and, according to the launch evidence, focuses on easier installation and integration across popular agent environments. The product is useful for developers and power users who are assembling toolchains around MCP and want a more curated discovery surface than scattered GitHub repositories. It was nominated by today’s X launch artifact and selected only after the official unyly.org homepage resolved successfully.

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Desktop Agent Center
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Desktop Agent Center is an open-source local AI automation gateway that connects global hotkeys, clipboard monitoring, and mainstream AI tools such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity. Users select text anywhere on their computer, press a shortcut, and the app sends the content to the configured provider, then writes back the result. It is built for personal productivity users who want fast desktop-level AI actions without paying for separate API usage or building custom automations. The project is notable because it takes a pragmatic route to local AI assistance: rather than replacing existing AI products, it orchestrates them from the user’s desktop with hotkeys, tray behavior, and provider sessions.

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Freu CLI
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Freu CLI is an open-source browser automation tool that lets AI agents replace repeated web interactions with compiled browser skills. The official README frames it as the first release of the Freu AI automation suite, focused on high-efficiency web orchestration and cutting agent token usage by up to 90%. It is aimed at developers building web agents, browser-use workflows, and local automation where an assistant repeatedly navigates the same pages or forms. Instead of paying a model to rediscover every click, Freu lets deterministic programs handle known browser tasks. The tool is notable now because computer-use agents are becoming useful but still burn context and tokens on repetitive UI work, making skill compilation a practical optimization layer.

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Etched
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Etched is an AI inference hardware and platform company building specialized chips and systems for serving transformer models at high speed. Its vertically integrated approach spans custom silicon, racks, software, manufacturing, and production infrastructure for organizations that need efficient large-scale inference. AI labs, cloud providers, enterprise platforms, and model-serving teams can evaluate Etched for workloads where latency, throughput, and cost per token matter. The platform is relevant to teams running production agents, assistants, and high-volume generative AI services. Etched stands out because it is not just another model API: it attacks the infrastructure bottleneck underneath AI products by designing hardware and software together for transformer inference.

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Coord
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Coord is a local coordination layer for teams running several AI coding agents in parallel. It gives Claude Code, Cursor, Codex and other agent sessions a shared bulletin board with atomic task claims, heartbeats, blocking watches, an optional markdown audit trail and a local SQLite-backed control surface. That solves a very practical failure mode: one agent fixes a bug while another continues building on stale assumptions because the sessions cannot see each other. Coord is useful for developers experimenting with multi-agent coding, worktree-based parallelism, or agent swarms that need lightweight synchronization without a hosted platform. It is notable now because parallel coding agents are becoming normal, and the project targets their coordination problem directly with MCP plus A2A-style primitives.

BetterDB Context Layer is a MIT-licensed Valkey-native context layer for AI agents published inside BetterDB’s monitor repository. The Show HN launch positions it as a database-backed way to store and retrieve context for agent workflows using Valkey/Redis-style infrastructure rather than a fragile in-memory prompt pile. It is useful for developers already operating Redis-like systems who want agent memory, context windows, or retrieval primitives close to production data infrastructure. The broader BetterDB repository is a real-time monitoring, slowlog and audit-trail project for Valkey and Redis, with the AI context layer housed under the packages tree. Because the official page is on GitHub, dedupe is by BetterDB-inc/monitor plus the package path, not by github.com alone.

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Publora
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Publora is a social media publishing platform and API built for the agent era. It lets users post to Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, Threads, Bluesky, X, Mastodon, LinkedIn, and Telegram from one dashboard or one HTTPS call. The product also exposes an MCP server with agent-facing tools, so Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, OpenClaw, n8n, Make, and similar systems can schedule and publish posts through plain-language instructions. Publora is useful for creators, agencies, automation builders, and social-media teams that want AI agents to manage distribution without custom glue code for every platform. It is notable today because the site shows a live Product Hunt launch, a free tier, agent-specific positioning, and a clear official affiliate program.

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Toolnexus
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Toolnexus is a provider-agnostic agent toolkit that unifies MCP servers, agent skills, built-in tools, functions, HTTP endpoints, streaming, retries, hooks, memory, metrics, and agent-to-agent patterns behind a compact developer API. The Python package page positions it as a practical middle ground: not a heavyweight agent framework, but more complete than a toy loop once real tools, memory, and observability are needed. Developers can point Toolnexus at an mcp.json file and a skills folder, then run agents against OpenRouter, OpenAI, Anthropic, or other supported clients. It was discovered through a July 1 Show HN LLM/MCP result and verified on PyPI with a July 2 release. Smartoolbox users building agent infrastructure may find it useful for quickly wiring real tool surfaces into LLM workflows.

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Dremio
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Dremio is a data lakehouse platform that helps teams query, govern, and accelerate analytics across distributed data sources. It gives data engineers and analytics teams a way to make lakehouse data usable for dashboards, BI, semantic layers, and AI applications without constantly copying data into separate warehouses. For AI teams, Dremio can support retrieval, feature access, and governed enterprise data pipelines where trustworthy context matters. It is best suited for organizations with large data estates, cloud object storage, and a need for fast SQL access. Dremio stands out by combining open lakehouse architecture with performance acceleration and governance features that make enterprise data easier to activate.

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Jared
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Jared is a social-first AI employee designed to work inside Slack and across a large connected tool stack without waiting for explicit prompts every time. The product positions itself as more than a passive chatbot by following conversations, understanding team context, brainstorming with people, and proactively stepping in with summaries, reports, drafts, follow-ups, and research when it detects something useful to do. Its core pitch is that an AI coworker should be able to read the room, participate naturally, and get work done across the systems a team already uses. That makes Jared especially relevant for organizations that live in chat and want a more embedded operational assistant instead of another standalone AI tab. It fits teams looking for proactive execution, not just reactive question answering.

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Cursor
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Cursor is an AI-powered code editor that enhances developer productivity through intelligent code suggestions, natural language commands, and seamless integration with existing codebases. Features include multi-line edits, smart rewrites, and cursor predictions, allowing efficient code writing and editing. The integrated chat functionality enables users to interact with the AI for code-related queries, reference specific files, and incorporate visual context. Cursor ensures privacy and security with a privacy mode where no code is stored, and supports importing extensions, themes, and keybindings from other editors. Trusted by engineers at top companies, Cursor is a valuable tool for modern software development.

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Tracecast
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Tracecast is an open-source system for generating interactive data apps on top of company data using a Cursor-style AI chat. It combines Marimo notebooks, LangGraph agents, and data warehouse connectors so an agent can explore data, run queries, and create a polished read-only notebook that business users can inspect without editing the underlying workflow. The project is aimed at data teams, founders, analysts, and product teams that want fast dashboard or data-app creation without turning every request into a manual notebook build. It is notable now because agentic analytics is moving from simple chat answers toward reproducible apps, where the generated result can be reviewed, deployed, and trusted more easily.

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Rubberduck
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Rubberduck is a software design agent that keeps the human in charge of architectural decisions instead of silently generating an implementation. The product is useful for developers, tech leads and AI-assisted teams who want a structured design partner before handing work to a coding agent. Its positioning on Show HN emphasizes that the agent helps reason about software design while users make the decisions, which is a healthier workflow than letting an autonomous tool invent hidden assumptions. Rubberduck fits Smartoolbox as a code-assistant and AI-agent tool because it targets the planning layer where many vibe-coded projects go wrong. It is notable now because it has a fresh launch, reachable official site, visible pricing, and a specific design-assistance niche rather than generic chatbot copy.

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Wyolet Relay
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Wyolet Relay is an open-source LLM router that puts one OpenAI-compatible endpoint in front of multiple model providers. It is built for developers and platform teams that want to bring their own keys, centralize routing, and run model traffic through self-hosted infrastructure instead of hard-coding every app to a single provider. The repository highlights scale-oriented deployment, Docker packaging, documentation, and provider abstraction, making it useful for AI app builders, internal tools teams, and agent platforms. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN LLM launch and has official docs and a maintained GitHub repository, giving Smartoolbox visitors a practical model-serving option.

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WC26-MCP
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WC26-MCP is a World Cup 2026 data toolkit designed for AI assistants and MCP-compatible clients. It packages tournament data into 18 ready-to-use tools covering teams, matches, venues, schedules, travel information, standings, fan zones, injuries, odds, and news, all without requiring API keys or external API calls. The product is built so Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and other MCP clients can query structured World Cup information directly, making it useful for travel planning, sports research, fan experiences, and custom agent workflows. Because the data ships with the package, users avoid rate limits, authentication friction, and external dependencies that often complicate tool use. For developers and AI users building sports-focused assistants or event experiences, WC26-MCP offers a lightweight way to add reliable tournament context and retrieval capabilities.

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Ouijit
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Ouijit is a Git worktree-based task and terminal session manager designed for CLI coding agents. It gives developers parallel workstreams, integrated terminals, lifecycle hooks, scripts, a session-aware CLI, live agent status, notifications, and VM sandboxing for untrusted code. That makes it useful for engineers who run Claude Code, Codex, or other terminal agents on multiple tasks and need cleaner isolation than a pile of ad hoc shell sessions. The project is free, open source, and ships desktop releases, making it more product-like than a raw library. It surfaced in Show HN automation searches as command terminals for coding agents, and official GitHub plus website documentation verified the workflow, releases, and agentic-development positioning.

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Max Requirements
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Max Requirements is an AI-powered requirements gathering tool that turns an idea into a structured product specification through a guided conversation. Instead of filling in static forms, users talk through their concept while six specialized AI agents handle discovery, user analysis, story creation, prioritization, UX planning, and final review. The result is a complete requirements document with user stories, MoSCoW prioritization, screen planning, PDF export, and shareable reports for developers or stakeholders. It is designed to help founders, product managers, and non-technical builders clarify what they want before development begins. By breaking requirements gathering into distinct AI-led phases, Max Requirements helps teams move from vague project ideas to a usable build-ready specification faster, with more structure and less back-and-forth during planning.

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Zot
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Zot is a coding agent harness that provides a structured workspace for running, orchestrating, and supervising AI coding agents across real development tasks. It launched on Show HN with 78 points and quickly gained attention as a practical control layer for agents that write, edit, and test code. The tool is aimed at developers, engineering teams, and technical operators who use AI coding assistants daily and need better task dispatch, session management, and output verification than a raw terminal provides. Zot stands out because it treats the coding agent as an operational system component rather than a one-shot prompt tool: it manages agent lifecycles, coordinates work, and wraps the experience in an interface designed for continuous use. For teams shipping with AI agents, it reduces context switching and improves agent reliability.

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R1
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R1 is Unitree’s humanoid robot platform built to make general-purpose robotics more accessible for developers, researchers, and early commercial adopters. The robot combines a compact humanoid form factor with multimodal interaction capabilities, giving teams a way to experiment with embodied AI, mobility, and human-robot interaction in a more affordable package than many enterprise humanoids. It is useful for robotics research, education, prototyping, and exploratory automation projects where users want a real humanoid platform rather than a simulated environment. R1 stands out because Unitree positions it as a lower-entry product in a category that is usually expensive and difficult to access. For robotics labs, technical teams, and enthusiasts tracking practical humanoid platforms, R1 is a notable product with strong visibility in the emerging consumer-to-developer robotics market.

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ANMA
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ANMA is an open-source boundary-enforcement tool for AI coding agents that converts plain YAML module contracts into agent instructions, hooks, and CI checks. It targets engineering teams using Claude Code or similar coding agents who want cheaper or less careful models to respect architecture rules instead of editing across layers, touching forbidden modules, or drifting from repo constraints. The README emphasizes Python, Go, and TypeScript support, a GitHub Action, PyPI package, and benchmark evidence showing fewer boundary violations. ANMA is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and offers a practical governance layer for agentic coding: not another code assistant, but a way to make existing assistants safer inside real repositories.

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Gonfire
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Gonfire is an AI-era technical assessment platform for evaluating how candidates actually work with coding assistants. Instead of treating AI use as cheating or hiding it behind a clean pull request, Gonfire captures the candidate’s interactions, steering decisions, and work process on real codebases. It is aimed at engineering teams, recruiters, and founders who need a better signal than traditional take-homes now that candidates can generate polished code with an assistant. The workflow helps reviewers compare how people guide AI, debug, ask for changes, and make tradeoffs. Gonfire is notable now because its Show HN launch frames a sharp hiring problem for 2026: the output may look similar, but the way someone collaborates with AI is becoming the real skill signal.

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AuthAI
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AuthAI is an open-source relay for user-authorized AI sessions, letting app builders support sign-in with ChatGPT, Grok, or Copilot subscriptions. It targets developers who want to build applications around AI accounts a user already has, while keeping consent flows explicit and avoiding brittle credential sharing. The repository includes cloud and self-hosted paths, provider device-code flows, documentation, and packages for integrating the authorization relay into products. That makes AuthAI useful for agent apps, AI-powered SaaS experiments, and tools that need delegated access without asking users for raw tokens. Its June Show HN appearance and active repository make it a notable developer-infrastructure candidate as more apps try to interoperate with consumer AI subscriptions and agent sessions.

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Recursant
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Recursant is an open-source control plane for governing AI agents across clouds, stacks and runtime frameworks. It positions itself as an Istio-style mesh for agents, with a registry control plane, sidecar-mediated data plane, mTLS identity, A2A and MCP traffic governance, policy enforcement, audit trails, observability and compliance workflows. The tool is for enterprises and platform teams that are moving beyond isolated agent prototypes and need answers about which agent can call which tool, what data is leaking, how costs are behaving and whether guardrails work. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch focused on agent governance, a category that becomes more important as production agents spread across heterogeneous infrastructure.

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SWEny
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SWEny is an AI workflow-as-code system for engineering teams that want repeatable agent workflows instead of ad hoc chat prompts. Users describe a task in plain English, and SWEny generates a DAG of focused AI agents with scoped MCP tools, structured outputs, conditional routing, tracked tool calls and report delivery through channels such as pull requests or team notifications. It includes a CLI, core npm package, documentation and a marketplace of ready-to-run workflows for jobs like PR review or production triage. SWEny is useful for teams that want agents to learn from sources, act through tools and report through existing channels while keeping execution inspectable. Its Show HN launch makes it a timely addition to practical agent orchestration.

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Polygraph
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Polygraph is a meta-harness for AI agents that focuses on cross-repository visibility and persistent working context. The product promises to give agents “what they need” across codebases, including session memory and a broader project view, so agentic coding workflows are less constrained by a single repository or short-lived chat state. It is aimed at developers and teams experimenting with multi-repo agent work, long-running software tasks, and coding assistants that need to maintain continuity across sessions. Polygraph surfaced through a 2026-06-25 Show HN launch and its official homepage at trypolygraph.com is reachable. While the public page is concise, it clearly positions Polygraph as an agent infrastructure product, not a generic blog post or research article.

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Drift Lang
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Drift Lang is an intent-based language for building agentic systems by writing English-shaped blocks that transpile to async Python. Its repository shows agents with model selection, budgets, parallel fan-out, typed classification, conditionals, MCP support, Dendric memory integration, PyPI packaging, and a VS Code extension. It is for developers who want more structure than loose prompts but less boilerplate than hand-written orchestration code. Drift can help turn repeatable agent workflows into readable source files while still producing executable Python for real applications. It is notable now because agent development is moving toward more explicit programming models, and Drift’s Show HN launch provides a concrete example of natural-language-like syntax becoming a developer-facing DSL.

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Strands Agents
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Strands Agents is an open-source AI agent SDK from AWS that lets developers build production-ready agents in a few lines of Python or TypeScript code. It supports any model provider including Amazon Bedrock, Anthropic, and OpenAI, giving teams a model-agnostic way to create agents with hooks, guardrails, and adaptive tools. The SDK comes from Amazon's own production agent systems and is designed for builders who want to move from prototype to deployment without rewriting orchestration logic. It includes features like structured tool calling, multi-step reasoning, session management, and observability hooks. Strands Agents is notable now because it bridges the gap between raw model APIs and production agent frameworks, offering a middle ground between heavyweight orchestration platforms and bare-bones model wrappers. For teams already on AWS or using multiple model providers, it provides a unified agent development layer.

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Agentikus
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Agentikus is a control interface for local AI agents, built around workspaces where teams can send instructions, exchange files, and monitor managed or unmanaged agents from one place. Instead of keeping long-running coding assistants, terminals, documents, and handoffs scattered across personal machines, Agentikus positions itself as a shared coordination surface for agent-based team workflows. It is useful for developers, founders, agencies, and small engineering teams experimenting with multiple local agents and needing clearer status, file exchange, and human oversight. The fresh Show HN launch describes a platform for collaborating with agents in team workflows, while the official homepage verifies the core product identity as a local-agent control interface rather than a generic AI chat app.

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Nova Intelligence
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Nova Intelligence is an agentic AI platform built to increase productivity for SAP teams and enterprise operations. It helps users understand SAP workflows, automate repetitive analysis, and surface business context that is usually buried across complex enterprise systems. The platform is useful for finance, supply chain, IT, and operations teams that need faster answers and less manual navigation inside SAP environments. Instead of offering a generic chatbot, Nova focuses on domain-specific enterprise work where permissions, structured data, and process knowledge matter. Its edge is the combination of SAP specialization, agentic task support, and productivity workflows tailored for teams that rely on large ERP deployments.

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Forge AI Lab
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Forge AI Lab is a self-hosted workflow engine for coordinating multiple coding agents on one repository without collisions. It lets teams pick the best agent for each task, run work in isolated git worktrees, enforce CI checks, review results, and merge through a structured lifecycle. The project includes REST, MCP, CLI, and an optional web UI, making it useful for engineering teams, agencies, and power users who want agentic development to look more like an auditable production workflow than a pile of ad hoc terminals. Forge surfaced in recent GitHub MCP and workflow-automation searches with fresh traction. It is notable because multi-agent coding needs orchestration, isolation, evidence, and review gates to scale safely.

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Outlit
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Outlit is customer-context infrastructure for teams building proactive AI agents around churn, retention, and account workflows. Instead of forcing agents to act on scattered CRM notes, support tickets, usage logs, and call summaries, Outlit organizes customer signals so agents can understand what is happening and trigger the right follow-up before an account slips away. It is aimed at B2B SaaS, customer success, revenue, and product teams that already have the data but need a cleaner operational layer for AI-driven action. The recent Show HN launch makes it timely because agent builders are moving beyond generic chatbots toward systems that require reliable business context, customer memory, and workflow-ready intelligence.

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synty
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synty is a local-first memory layer for coding-agent sessions and GitHub activity. It passively records sessions from tools such as Claude Code, Codex, and Cowork, then turns them into searchable local context through a terminal UI, CLI, and MCP surface. Developers can ask what happened in previous work, find related pull requests, inspect raw JSONL and SQLite data, and give future agents context without relying on a proprietary viewer. That makes synty useful for engineering teams and solo builders who run many AI-assisted implementation sessions and need recall, analytics, and continuity across them. Its Show HN launch described distributed LLM tracing with GitHub PR and issue linking, and the official superlinked/synty README verifies the concrete local-first workflow.

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tree0.land
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tree0 is more than just a website builder; its an AI-powered solution that revolutionizes web design. With natural language prompts, you can craft stunning, mobile-friendly websites in minutes. No coding skills needed, just your creativity.

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Notion Custom Agents
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Notion Custom Agents lets teams build AI workflows that run inside their existing workspace, using shared docs, databases, and connected tools as live context. The product can answer recurring questions, route incoming work, generate status updates, and automate repeatable team processes without forcing people to rebuild knowledge in a separate system. It is designed for operations teams, project leads, support managers, and knowledge-heavy organizations that already rely on Notion as a system of record. What makes it stand out is the combination of workspace-native memory, granular permissions, and multi-tool coordination across platforms like Slack, mail, and calendars. For companies that want practical agent automation embedded in collaboration software they already use, Notion Custom Agents offers a strong path from internal knowledge to repeatable execution.

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Littlebird
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Littlebird is a personal AI work assistant built around continuous context rather than manual prompting. Instead of forcing users to copy information into a chatbot, it learns from the active window on your screen, listens during meetings to take notes, and builds a cross-app understanding of the work already happening throughout your day. That lets it answer questions, draft documents, and help with planning using real context from documents, conversations, and projects. The product emphasizes privacy controls, including the ability to pause collection and delete recent or full history, while positioning itself as a more relevant alternative to generic assistants. For busy professionals juggling documents, meetings, and research across many tools, Littlebird acts like a persistent memory layer for day-to-day knowledge work.

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Vercel AI SDK 7
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Vercel AI SDK 7 is a developer toolkit for building production-grade AI applications, agents, and model-powered interfaces in JavaScript and TypeScript. It gives teams primitives for streaming responses, tool calling, approvals, durable workflows, telemetry, and deployment-ready agent patterns without stitching together every low-level integration manually. Developers can use it to create chat apps, coding copilots, workflow agents, customer-support assistants, and internal automation tools that need reliable state and observability. The SDK is especially useful for product engineers already deploying on Vercel, but it also fits broader web stacks that need structured AI orchestration. Its strength is combining frontend ergonomics with backend agent infrastructure in one maintained open-source ecosystem.

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Temporal
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Temporal is a durable workflow orchestration platform for building reliable applications, background jobs, and long-running processes. It helps developers define workflows in code, automatically handle retries, preserve state, and recover from failures without bolting together fragile queues and cron jobs. Engineering teams, infrastructure groups, fintech products, AI agent builders, and SaaS companies can use Temporal to coordinate multi-step systems that must complete correctly even when services fail. The platform is especially valuable for agentic applications where actions can span minutes, hours, or days. What makes Temporal stand out is its durability model: instead of treating workflows as disposable scripts, it gives production software a fault-tolerant execution layer for complex automation.

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Fewshell
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Fewshell is a self-hosted SSH copilot for on-call engineers, DevOps teams, MLOps researchers, sysadmins, and self-hosters who need safer remote infrastructure access from mobile and desktop. Instead of giving an autonomous agent blanket terminal control, Fewshell keeps the human in the approval loop: AI can draft shell commands, explain intent, and assist with server workflows, but it will not run commands without explicit confirmation. The project is notable now because recent AI-agent incidents have made production command safety a front-page concern, and Fewshell’s Show HN launch positions it as a deliberately conservative alternative to auto-approval terminal agents. It supports SSH workflows, secrets management, self-hosted sync, and cross-platform apps.

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Bastion Computer
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Bastion Computer deploys isolated virtual computers for background coding agents. Instead of giving an autonomous agent direct access to a developer’s laptop or shared server, it provides disposable Linux environments where agents can clone repositories, install dependencies, run builds, and continue work in the background. The product is aimed at developers and teams experimenting with multiple long-running coding agents who need stronger isolation, reproducibility, and operational control. It is notable now because the Show HN launch frames a practical infrastructure need: as coding agents work for hours, they need safe sandboxes with enough resources and persistence to complete real tasks without risking the user’s primary machine.

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TrustAI
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TrustAI is a browser-based automation assistant that watches work context across business tools and suggests the next useful cross-platform workflow instead of waiting for a perfect prompt. The official site describes a system that learns how a team’s best people handle CRM, inbox, sheets, Slack, Salesforce, HubSpot, documents, and other web apps, then proposes one-click automations or builds a workflow from plain language and runs it after approval. It is aimed at sales, recruiting, finance, legal, support, operations, and other teams that repeat judgment-heavy browser work across several tools. The Show HN launch and YC company page verify a concrete product focused on suggested background automations, adoption analytics, and spreading proven workflows across an organization.

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Enoch
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Enoch is an agentic research control plane for teams that want AI research runs to be queued, supervised, and packaged with evidence instead of scattered across ad hoc prompts. The open-source system provides idea intake, dispatch gates, local AI run supervision, provenance capture, and artifact packaging so researchers can keep track of what an agent did and why. It is aimed at AI builders, research teams, analysts, and operators experimenting with autonomous research workflows but still needing governance and review points. Enoch is notable now because agentic research is moving from impressive demos toward repeatable pipelines where evidence, routing, and approval matter as much as the final answer. Its fresh Show HN launch and official README make the project verifiable and timely.

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OpenPets
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OpenPets is a tray-first desktop companion for AI coding agents. It shows a small animated pet that reacts when an agent thinks, edits, runs tests, waits for approval, finishes or hits an error. The desktop app includes integrations for Claude Code and OpenCode, MCP support for other agents, pet packs and privacy-conscious static speech bubbles that avoid exposing prompts, code, command output or secrets. It is for developers who want lightweight ambient visibility into agent state without staring at logs. It is notable now because coding agents are becoming long-running coworkers, and OpenPets turns invisible background activity into a playful, glanceable status layer.

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Hezo
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Hezo is a self-hosted AI-agent operations platform for running teams of agents on hardware you control. It gives founders, developers and privacy-sensitive teams a company-like workspace with org charts, goals, projects, budgets, long-term memory and approval steps instead of single disposable chat sessions. The product is notable because the Show HN launch positions it as agent-team infrastructure that never sees a user’s real secrets: orchestration happens in a local or self-owned environment while people still define goals and approve work. Smartoolbox visitors looking for autonomous agent workflows can use Hezo as a lead for private multi-agent project execution, especially where cloud-hosted agents, credential exposure or weak oversight are blockers.

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Agent Chat Bridge
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Agent Chat Bridge turns an AI IDE chat session into an asynchronous agent that can resume itself later. The bridge lets a running assistant register a timer, shell command, or webhook, end the current session normally, then receive a prompt back in the same IDE chat when the trigger fires. It currently targets VS Code GitHub Copilot Chat and Windsurf Cascade, with a local HTTP API for jobs and status polling. The tool is useful for developers who want agent sessions to wait on tests, deployments, review windows, external webhooks, or timed reminders without manually babysitting the chat. It is notable because most IDE agents are turn-based; Agent Chat Bridge adds practical callback behavior for long-running workflows.

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thClaws
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thClaws is a native Rust agent harness platform that runs locally and gives users a sovereign workspace for coding, automation, memory, and coordinated agent teams. It is designed for people who want agentic workflows on their own machine instead of relying entirely on hosted chat or IDE extensions. The README describes a single binary that can read files, run commands, use tools, search knowledge bases, and coordinate multiple agents across providers. That makes it relevant for developers, power users, and privacy-conscious teams experimenting with local AI operations. It is notable now because the April 2026 repository combines desktop-style agent workspace ideas with local-first execution, multi-provider support, and an explicit sovereignty angle.

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Reversa
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Reversa is an open-source reverse-engineering framework that turns legacy codebases into executable specifications for AI coding agents. It is aimed at engineering teams maintaining old systems where important business rules, module contracts, and architectural decisions live only in the source code. By coordinating specialized analysis agents, Reversa extracts flows, rules, dependencies, and traceable documentation that other coding agents can use before making changes. That makes it useful for migrations, refactors, audits, and safer agent-assisted development on systems that were never designed around specs. Reversa is timely because AI coding tools are moving from greenfield demos into real production code, where missing context is the biggest risk.

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Reasonix
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Reasonix is a DeepSeek-native agent framework with a TypeScript and Ink terminal interface, built around cache-first execution, R1 thought harvesting, and tool-call repair. The official repository describes it as a developer framework for constructing agents that preserve useful reasoning traces, recover from malformed tool calls, and reduce repeated model work through caching. It is aimed at AI engineers and framework hackers who want more control over agent loops than a hosted chatbot or generic SDK provides. Reasonix is notable now because open reasoning models and tool-using agents are improving quickly, but reliability still depends on orchestration details. Its strong recent GitHub signal makes it a timely listing for developers experimenting with lower-level agent runtime design.

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Drifty
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Drifty is an AI focus and time-tracking tool that watches how work actually happens inside apps, then separates focused work from distraction drift. Unlike basic time trackers that only report which app was open, Drifty’s homepage says it uses AI to understand the activity inside each app so users can see clearer workday patterns, identify distracting tabs, and regain attention before a session is lost. It fits Smartoolbox visitors who want personal productivity analytics without manually categorizing every task. The Show HN launch positioned it as an AI focus agent that can shut down distracting tabs while you work, which makes it timely for remote workers, builders, students, and anyone experimenting with AI-assisted attention management. The official site was reachable and clearly describes the product’s value proposition.

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SmolVM
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SmolVM provides secure, isolated computers that AI agents can use to browse, run code, and complete work without touching the host machine directly. The project is useful for developers and agent-platform builders who need small disposable environments for browser use, command execution, testing, and automation while limiting the blast radius of mistakes. Its README positions the tool as a practical sandbox layer for parallel local agents and other AI workflows, not just a generic virtual-machine experiment. SmolVM is timely because computer-use agents and coding agents increasingly need real operating-system access, but teams also need isolation, reproducibility, and safety boundaries. The recent Show HN listing and active GitHub project make it a strong infrastructure candidate for Smartoolbox.

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WorkBuddy
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WorkBuddy is a desktop AI agent from Tencent AI that has been China's most popular desktop AI assistant and is now available worldwide. It handles coding, data analysis, and productivity tasks autonomously through a built-in Skills Gallery that lets users extend its capabilities. WorkBuddy runs natively on the desktop rather than in a browser, giving it direct access to local files, applications, and system resources. It is aimed at knowledge workers, developers, and power users who want an AI agent that can operate their computer directly — opening apps, reading documents, executing code, and managing workflows without manual hand-holding. The global launch makes WorkBuddy one of the first major Chinese-developed desktop AI agents available internationally, bringing Tencent's agent technology to a broader audience.

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OpenAI API
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OpenAI API is a developer platform for building applications with OpenAI models for chat, reasoning, coding, image generation, speech, embeddings, and agent workflows. It gives developers and product teams programmable access to model capabilities through documented endpoints, SDKs, usage controls, and deployment tooling. Common use cases include customer support automation, internal copilots, code assistants, content generation, data extraction, search, and multimodal product features. The platform is best for startups, engineering teams, enterprises, and builders who need flexible AI infrastructure instead of a single packaged app. OpenAI API stands out because it offers broad model coverage, strong ecosystem support, and production-oriented primitives for embedding AI into software.

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n8n
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n8n is a workflow automation platform for connecting apps, APIs, databases, and AI tools into repeatable business processes. Users can build visual automations, run self-hosted or cloud workflows, and combine triggers, conditions, code, and AI steps without stitching everything together manually. It supports use cases such as lead routing, data syncing, internal operations, customer support automation, and AI agent orchestration through integrations like MCP-compatible tools. n8n is useful for developers, automation specialists, operations teams, and startups that need flexible workflows beyond simple no-code recipes. Its strength is the mix of visual building, technical extensibility, self-hosting options, and a growing ecosystem for AI-powered automation.

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Street AI Memory
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Street AI Memory is a cross-provider memory layer for LLM applications that reduces prompt bloat as conversations grow. It sits between an app and model providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, DeepSeek, Together, or Groq, stores conversation signals into stacks, decays stale data, and retrieves only relevant context for each turn. The project reports 55–80% input-token reductions in a 16-turn benchmark, with average savings around 68%. It is useful for developers building chatbots, agents, RAG apps, and long-running assistants that need continuity without repeatedly sending the full transcript. The fresh Show HN launch and official GitHub README verify an installable Python package, provider adapters, local embedding model setup, and alpha-stage API notes.

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Flint
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Flint is an open-source Microsoft Research visualization language designed so AI agents can create reliable, attractive charts from compact, human-editable specifications. Instead of forcing an agent to emit verbose Vega-Lite, ECharts or Chart.js settings, Flint accepts data, semantic types, chart type and encodings, then derives layout, parsing, scales, axes, formatting and backend-native specs. It supports 46 chart types, an online editor, a gallery of examples, TypeScript/JavaScript library usage and an MCP server for agent workflows. Flint is useful for data analysts, dashboard builders, research teams and AI-agent developers who need chart generation that is easier to validate and edit. The fresh Show HN link and official Microsoft GitHub Pages/GitHub repo establish it as a standalone developer tool.

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Mirdel
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Mirdel is a next-generation AI workspace that provides local-first, UI-based agent workflows for developers, product teams, and technical operators. It combines visual workflow building with agent execution, letting users design multi-step AI processes through a graphical interface rather than writing orchestration code from scratch. The platform is aimed at teams that want to prototype, test, and run AI agent pipelines with visibility into each step, without relying entirely on terminal-based or code-only toolchains. Mirdel launched on Show HN and positions itself in the growing local-first AI workspace category alongside tools like n8n, Langflow, and Open WebUI, but with a stronger emphasis on agent-native workflow design. The official homepage at mirdel.ai confirms an active product with a clear landing page and workspace UI.

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Otari
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Otari is Mozilla AI’s open-source, OpenAI-compatible LLM gateway for teams that want one self-hosted endpoint across many model providers. It lets developers put a controlled API layer in front of 40-plus providers, then manage virtual keys, budgets, usage tracking, pricing, guardrails, health checks, and OpenAI-compatible generation surfaces from their own infrastructure. That makes it useful for engineering teams, AI platform owners, and product builders who need provider flexibility without scattering keys and spend controls across every service. Otari is notable now because model access is increasingly multi-provider, while enterprises still need centralized policy, observability, and cost governance. Its official Mozilla AI repository, docs, Docker setup, and HN launch verify a real developer tool rather than a thin wrapper.

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OpenHive
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OpenHive is a platform where AI agents share solutions so that other agents do not have to re-solve the same problems. It creates a collaborative knowledge layer for AI agents, enabling them to publish, discover, and reuse verified solutions across tasks, reducing redundant computation and improving efficiency. The platform is aimed at AI agent developers, automation engineers, and teams running multi-agent systems that encounter repetitive sub-tasks. OpenHive launched on Show HN with 5 points and targets a practical bottleneck in agent architectures: without shared memory or solution caching, each agent independently solves identical problems from scratch. By enabling agent-to-agent knowledge transfer, OpenHive helps build more efficient, collectively intelligent agent systems. It is notable now because multi-agent deployments are growing rapidly and the need for shared agent intelligence is becoming a real infrastructure requirement.

Grok models via Cloudflare AI Gateway gives developers a managed way to route xAI model requests through Cloudflare’s AI Gateway. The gateway provides centralized access, observability, caching, analytics, and controls for model usage across applications. Teams can use it to connect Grok text, audio, image, or video capabilities into production software while keeping monitoring and operational tooling in one place. It is built for developers, platform teams, and AI product builders who need reliable model infrastructure rather than a standalone chatbot. The useful difference is Cloudflare’s network and gateway layer, which can simplify provider access, governance, and performance tracking for AI applications.

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TinyAgents
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TinyAgents is an open-source Rust harness for building recursive language-model systems, where agents can call other agents, graphs can run graphs, and workflows remain inspectable, checkpointed, and policy checked. The project is aimed at developers and AI infrastructure builders who want stronger control over long-running LLM workflows than a single expanding context window provides. Its README frames the approach around Recursive Language Models: instead of stuffing every instruction into one prompt, the model explores an external environment, decomposes work, and calls sub-models or sub-agents over smaller snippets. That makes TinyAgents relevant for teams experimenting with durable agent runtimes, evaluation, sandboxing, and complex orchestration. It appeared today through Show HN and has official repository documentation with enough technical detail to list as a developer tool.

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WPVibe AI
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WPVibe AI is a hosted WordPress MCP server that gives assistants such as Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and Claude Code structured access to self-hosted WordPress sites. After a one-click connection, users can ask an AI to create drafts, inspect plugins, upload media, search stock photos, run guarded WP-CLI commands, build classic themes, review rendered HTML, and manage site content through WordPress APIs. The product is aimed at WordPress site owners, agencies, content teams, and developers who want conversational automation without giving an agent unrestricted production access. WPVibe stands out because its homepage emphasizes safety: role-based permissions, draft defaults, dry-run previews, audit logs, encrypted credentials, and approval gates. The X launch artifact and official homepage verified a concrete, timely MCP workflow.

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Reyn
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Reyn is a local-first AI assistant for macOS that observes what is happening on screen, journals work activity, and helps users recall context from their day. It is built for knowledge workers, founders, designers, and developers who lose time reconstructing what they did, where a decision came from, or which document contained a detail. The official site describes Reyn Desktop as privacy-first software that runs locally on a Mac, giving it a clearer positioning than generic meeting notes or chat memory tools. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and solves a timely workflow problem: giving AI useful personal context while keeping screen observation and memory under the user’s control.

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Nexa Gauge
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Nexa Gauge is a graph-based evaluation engine for LLM and RAG systems that focuses on repeatable quality measurement, caching, cost awareness and structured reports. It is aimed at AI engineers, RAG builders, platform teams and evaluation-heavy product teams that need more than ad hoc prompt checks before shipping model-backed features. The project packages metrics and report generation into a developer tool that can help compare outputs, estimate cost, and keep evaluation runs consistent across experiments. Nexa Gauge is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch while teams are moving from one-off demos into production AI systems where regression testing, budgets and quality signals matter. It maps cleanly to Smartoolbox’s developer and AI-agent infrastructure audience.

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Virtuals
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Virtuals is an AI-agent builder ecosystem for creating, launching, and coordinating autonomous agents across founder, trader, creator, and distribution workflows. The platform positions itself around building useful AI agents and networks rather than operating only as a launchpad. Builders can use Virtuals to explore agent identities, agent economies, community distribution, and AI-native products that rely on persistent digital actors. It is most relevant for founders, crypto-native builders, agent developers, and communities experimenting with AI ownership and monetization. Virtuals stands out by combining agent creation with ecosystem mechanics, making it a useful signal for the broader shift from individual tools to agent networks.

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Maria AI
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Maria AI is an AI chemistry platform from molecule.one for autonomous molecular discovery and drug-development workflows. It helps research teams plan synthesis routes, evaluate chemistry options, and connect computational design with practical lab execution. The platform is useful for biotech companies, medicinal chemists, and discovery teams that need faster iteration from target molecule to experiment-ready plan. Maria AI stands out because it focuses on the specialist constraints of chemistry rather than generic chat or document assistance, combining domain-specific reasoning with molecule.one’s synthesis-planning expertise. Teams can use it to reduce manual research overhead, explore more candidate compounds, and coordinate chemistry decisions in workflows where accuracy and repeatability matter.

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Baseten
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Baseten is an AI inference platform for deploying, optimizing, and operating machine learning models in production. It helps engineering teams serve open-source or custom models with reliable performance, scalable infrastructure, and tooling built for real-world AI workloads rather than experimentation alone. That makes it useful for startups, enterprise AI teams, and ML engineers who need to move from prototype to production without building every layer of inference infrastructure themselves. Baseten supports model serving, optimization, and operational workflows that matter when latency, reliability, and cost control become business-critical. What makes Baseten stand out is its strong production focus and hands-on positioning around serious inference workloads, giving teams a dedicated platform for scaling AI products with less operational friction than maintaining a fully custom stack.

Crusoe Serverless Fine-Tuning is a private-preview platform for fine-tuning open-source AI models without manually provisioning GPU clusters. It helps AI builders upload data, configure training jobs, and run customization workflows on managed infrastructure while avoiding the operational burden of capacity planning, orchestration, and low-level hardware setup. The platform is useful for startups, ML engineers, research teams, and enterprises that need custom models but do not want to maintain a full training stack. Its differentiator is pairing serverless fine-tuning with Crusoe’s AI infrastructure positioning, giving teams a simpler path from model selection to private adaptation. It is a strong Smartoolbox fit for developer and AI-agent builders.

We created autonomous AI Agents that monitor the stock market for you while you go about your day.<p>How it works: Tell our AI Assistant what you want to monitor, and it creates a project for our team of autonomous AI Agents. You&#x27;ll get notifications (email + app) when significant events matching your criteria are detected. For short-term projects, you&#x27;ll be notified when your analysis is ready.<p>Behind the scenes: When you give the AI Assistant a request to monitor an entity (like a stock or group of stocks), an AI Project Manager plans the project and breaks the project down into manageable tasks. These tasks run asynchronously - some recurring (hourly&#x2F;daily&#x2F;weekly&#x2F;monthly&#x2F;quarterly&#x2F;yearly), others one-time.<p>Example prompts you can try: Long-term monitoring: - &quot;Monitor Apple stock and notify me of any important events and red flags&quot; - &quot;Monitor Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Meta stock. Notify me if any of them start trending toward being undervalued&quot;<p>Short-term analysis: - &quot;Create a project to analyze the last 30 earnings calls for Tesla, spot trends, and how the business has evolved over time&quot;<p>You can track the progress of all tasks as the AI Agents work in the background.<p>Try it here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;decodeinvesting.com&#x2F;chat" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;decodeinvesting.com&#x2F;chat</a><p>This is still an early version - we&#x27;re actively improving it based on feedback. Would love to hear what you think and what features you&#x27;d want to see next!<p>Previously shared our AI-powered Stock Market Research Analyst: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41156478">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=41156478</a>

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AgentLoom
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AgentLoom is a Python framework for turning multi-agent workflows into configurable, observable, resumable applications. Developers define agent systems with simple configuration and minimal glue code, then run them with runtime safety controls, restart support, and visibility into what each agent is doing. It is aimed at builders who have moved beyond single-prompt prototypes and need repeatable orchestration for multi-agent apps. The project fits teams testing agent pipelines for research, support, automation, or internal operations where failures need to be inspectable rather than hidden inside a notebook. It is notable now because its May 2026 repository launch packages safety, observability, and resume semantics as first-class features instead of afterthoughts.

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LLM Safe Haven
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LLM Safe Haven is an open-source security hardening utility for developers using AI coding agents. Running it with npx detects installed tools such as Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Continue, Aider, and Codex CLI, then installs or recommends protections like hooks, ignore files, sandbox guidance, audit logging, and exposed-secret scans. It is aimed at engineers who want a quick security posture check before letting agents operate inside real repositories. The tool is notable now because AI coding sessions can accidentally expose environment files, secrets, or sensitive context, and many teams still lack simple local guardrails. LLM Safe Haven packages those checks into a practical command-line workflow with a scorecard.

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Braintrust
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Braintrust is an AI evaluation and observability platform for teams shipping production LLM applications. It helps developers, product teams, and AI engineers run evals, inspect traces, compare model behavior, debug regressions, and monitor output quality as prompts, models, and datasets change. Teams can use Braintrust to build repeatable test suites, review failures, manage experiments, and create feedback loops between human review and automated evaluation. The platform is especially useful for companies moving beyond demos into customer-facing AI workflows where reliability matters. Braintrust stands out because it combines eval infrastructure, tracing, and collaboration tools in one workflow, making model quality a continuous engineering practice instead of a one-off launch checklist.

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OnBuzz
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OnBuzz is an open-source workspace for AI agent teams, published as the onbuzz-community repository by Loxia AI. The project positions itself as an “all-in-one and one-for-all agent,” suggesting a collaborative workspace where agent teams can be organized and operated from a common interface. It is relevant to developers and technical teams exploring team-based agent work, agent orchestration, and open-source alternatives to closed agent workspaces. OnBuzz appeared on Show HN on 2026-06-25 and the official GitHub repository is reachable with a clear product identity. Because the homepage is a shared host, deduplication is by the meaningful repository path, Loxia-ai/onbuzz-community, not by the github.com domain.

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Integuru
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Integuru is an API generation platform that creates fast, reliable integration APIs for any platform by analyzing source code. Instead of requiring developers to read documentation and write integration code manually, Integuru reverse-engineers platform behavior and generates working APIs automatically. It is aimed at developers, automation engineers, and AI agent builders who need to connect to third-party platforms that have limited, outdated, or nonexistent API documentation. Integuru launched on Show HN with 7 points and positioned itself as a tool for platform integration at speed. What makes it stand out is the source-code-first approach: rather than wrapping official APIs, it generates integration endpoints from how platforms actually work, making it useful for connecting to legacy systems, niche SaaS products, or platforms without public APIs.

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O3 Code
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O3 Code is a local browser-based code editor and orchestration environment for running AI coding agents in parallel. The official repo describes it as a way to bring a Codex-style desktop experience to a browser while connecting to a Mac workspace, bridge tools, worktrees, and active agent sessions. It is aimed at developers who use Claude Code, Codex, or other CLI agents and want to supervise multiple work streams without constantly switching contexts. The product is timely because agent swarms and parallel coding sessions are becoming a practical workflow for serious AI-assisted development. Smartoolbox visitors get a clear code-assistant listing with downloads, documentation, releases, and an inspectable open-source repo rather than a vague demo.

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CoreMem
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CoreMem is a portable context system for AI agents that lets users write their preferences, knowledge, and context once and load them into any AI agent at any time. It solves the repetitive problem of re-explaining your background, preferences, and project context to every new AI conversation or agent session. With CoreMem, users maintain a single source of truth for their AI context that works across Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and other agents. Featured on Show HN on May 22, 2026 with 5 points, CoreMem targets power users, developers, and professionals who work with multiple AI tools daily and want consistent context without copy-pasting the same background information repeatedly. The product is live at coremem.app with a clean interface for managing and deploying context profiles.

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Zift
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Zift is an open-source code scanner that finds embedded authorization logic so teams can externalize it into policy-as-code systems such as OPA, with Cedar support planned. The official README and Show HN launch describe a Rust tool that scans JavaScript, TypeScript, Java, Go, Python, and C# codebases, then outputs Rego and can connect to a local agent for deeper scanning. It is useful for security engineers, backend developers, and platform teams modernizing authorization across large repositories. Zift is notable now because AI coding agents can spread business rules quickly, but authorization logic still needs review, centralization, and auditability. As an agent-aware security utility, it fits Smartoolbox’s developer and AI-agent infrastructure audience.

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Spec27
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Spec27 is a spec-driven validation tool for AI agents and automation workflows. It focuses on making agent behavior easier to define, test, and verify by tying work back to explicit requirements instead of relying only on prompts and ad hoc human review. The product is useful for developers, product teams, and automation builders who need stronger confidence that agents follow intended rules, satisfy acceptance criteria, and produce outputs that can be audited. Its Show HN launch is timely because more teams are experimenting with autonomous workflows, but reliability and validation remain the bottleneck. Spec27 stands out as a focused quality layer for agentic systems rather than another agent runtime.

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Rocannon
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Rocannon turns an Ansible control node into a Model Context Protocol server, exposing every installed module and role as typed tools for AI agents. Instead of asking an agent to invent shell commands, teams can let Claude Code, Cursor, or a custom MCP client operate against the same Ansible modules already used for infrastructure automation. The workflow is valuable for DevOps engineers who want natural-language control over real environments while keeping the action surface tied to documented Ansible capabilities. Rocannon is notable now because it surfaced through Show HN and ships as an installable PyPI package with quickstart, doctor checks, and docs for connecting MCP clients to local infrastructure tooling.

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Sentry CLI
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Sentry CLI is a command-line integration that helps coding agents create Sentry dashboards tailored to a specific codebase. After authentication and setup, it gives AI development workflows a direct way to inspect application context and generate observability views for errors, performance, and operational monitoring. The tool is useful for engineering teams that already rely on Sentry and want agents to move beyond code edits into debugging and production visibility. Developers can use it to speed up incident analysis, create targeted dashboards, and connect AI coding assistants with real application telemetry. Its advantage is combining agent workflows with Sentry’s established error tracking and observability data.

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EdgeBench
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EdgeBench is an AI agent evaluation benchmark focused on how systems learn from and operate within real-world environments over time. The project frames long-horizon agent performance around executable, day-scale tasks instead of short isolated prompts, helping researchers measure persistence, adaptation, and environment learning. It is aimed at AI labs, agent-framework builders, benchmark researchers, and teams comparing autonomous systems for practical workflows. EdgeBench stands out by emphasizing scaling laws for environment learning, giving builders a more realistic lens on whether agents can improve through sustained interaction rather than only solving static coding or reasoning tests.

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Hermes Web UI
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Hermes Web UI is a browser dashboard for managing Hermes Agent installations. It provides real-time AI chat streaming, multi-session management, grouped platform channels, active session indicators, global model selection, file uploads and downloads, session search, scheduled job controls, usage and cost monitoring, and skill browsing from one responsive interface. The tool is useful for people running Hermes across Telegram, Discord, Slack or local sessions who want administration without living inside terminal logs. It is a distinct frontend rather than the agent runtime itself, so it deserves separate consideration for Smartoolbox visitors. It is notable now because the repo is new, has strong GitHub traction, and documents a straightforward npm install path.

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OpenMonoAgent.ai
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OpenMonoAgent.ai is a local-first, open-source coding agent that runs on a user's own hardware instead of sending every prompt and code context to a hosted model provider. The project combines a .NET CLI, llama.cpp inference server, Docker sandboxing, LSP/Roslyn code intelligence, MCP integration, playbooks, and a full agentic loop with built-in tools. It is useful for developers and teams that want AI coding assistance without per-token billing, external accounts, or routine code exfiltration. The recent repository traction makes it relevant to the broader shift toward self-hosted developer agents. For Smartoolbox visitors comparing cloud coding agents with private local alternatives, OpenMono offers a serious infrastructure-style option.

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Cline
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Meet Cline, your AI coding assistant for Visual Studio Code. Cline is a powerful tool designed to enhance your engineering teams productivity by creating thoughtful coding plans, providing transparent reasoning, and simplifying complex tasks step-by-step. With its open-source nature and transparency, Cline multiplies developer impact by explaining its approach and actions. Cline offers direct file creation and editing with differential views, making it easy to navigate and manipulate code efficiently. By leveraging agentic coding capabilities, Cline becomes your go-to partner for handling intricate software development tasks with ease. Empower your team with Cline and experience a new level of coding efficiency and collaboration.

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Agent Brain Trust
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Agent Brain Trust is a modular agent-skill suite that lets AI assistants summon structured expert panels for architecture critique, writing review, product strategy, design discussion, and other high-stakes reasoning tasks. It ships Cursor and Claude Code plugin artifacts plus a Brain Trust MCP server with taxonomy, experts, references, and turn-taking protocols so panels can draft relevant specialists instead of inventing vague personas. The tool is useful for developers, writers, founders, and agent-workflow builders who want repeatable critique patterns inside coding assistants. It surfaced through HN as a customizable expert-panel system for AI agents, and the official GitHub repository plus npm registry verify installable releases, standalone MCP usage, and bundled resources.

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Omnigent
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Omnigent is an open meta-harness for combining and managing multiple AI agents across coding, knowledge work, and internal business tools. It helps teams coordinate agents such as Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Pi, custom assistants, and private enterprise systems through a shared orchestration layer. Key use cases include centralizing agent sessions, standardizing tool access, improving governance, and making agent workflows more portable across vendors. It is built for engineering teams, AI platform teams, and enterprises experimenting with multi-agent operations. What makes Omnigent notable is its focus on the layer above individual agents: controls, context, collaboration, and interoperability rather than another standalone chatbot.

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Sibyl
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Sibyl is a self-hosted cross-agent memory runtime for AI coding tools. It gives Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, command-line agents, and custom assistants a shared knowledge graph instead of forcing every session to start from zero. Developers can run Sibyl locally, connect agents through CLI, hooks, MCP, and skills, then let those agents recall project context, remember decisions, and reflect across repeated work. That makes it useful for engineers who switch between multiple coding assistants or want persistent memory without handing project history to a hosted service. It stood out today through Show HN and official GitHub verification because the project frames memory as infrastructure: one graph, self-owned storage, and reusable context across the AI tools a team already uses.

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AIR Blackbox
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AIR Blackbox is an open-source compliance and audit infrastructure for autonomous AI agents, designed to satisfy regulators, clients, and boards. It provides four functional layers: Verify (HMAC-SHA256 tamper-evident records with post-quantum ML-DSA-65 signatures), Filter (PII and prompt injection scanning), Stabilize (CI/CD drift detection with 51 compliance checks), and Protect (human oversight attestation logging). The platform maps scan results to EU AI Act, ISO/IEC 42001, NIST AI RMF, and Colorado SB 24-205 frameworks, and generates self-verifying evidence bundles for auditors. Featured on Hacker News targeting the EU AI Act enforcement deadline of August 2, 2026, AIR Blackbox is available as a pip-installable CLI tool and a local gateway that proxies LLM calls with sub-millisecond overhead. It is essential for any team deploying AI agents in regulated industries.

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zSpreadSheet
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zSpreadSheet is an AI spreadsheet generator that creates professional Excel files from plain-English instructions. Users describe a budget tracker, invoice, profit-and-loss statement, report, or other workbook, and the tool generates a production-ready .xlsx with formatting, formulas, charts, and data structure. It is aimed at founders, finance operators, analysts, freelancers, and office teams that know what they want but do not want to build templates or remember Excel formulas. The homepage advertises dozens of Excel-oriented features, a simple three-step workflow, pricing, login, and a free start path, which makes it more productized than a throwaway demo. The Show HN launch is timely because spreadsheet creation remains one of the most practical business workflows for AI agents.

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Qdrant
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Qdrant is a high-performance vector database for AI applications, offering fast and accurate nearest-neighbor search for embeddings. It supports filtering, payload indexing, and distributed deployment, making it suitable for RAG, semantic search, and recommendation engines. Built for developers and ML engineers who need a reliable, open-source vector store with strong query performance at scale.

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Sverklo
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Sverklo is a repo memory system for coding agents that gives AI assistants persistent, searchable context about a codebase's architecture, conventions, and decisions. Instead of forcing agents to re-read entire repositories on every task, Sverklo builds and maintains a structured memory layer that coding agents can query through MCP. It is designed for developers and engineering teams who use Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, or similar AI coding tools and want faster, more accurate agent output grounded in project-specific knowledge. Sverklo launched on Show HN and targets a growing pain: as AI coding agents handle larger tasks, their effectiveness depends on deep repo understanding that pure context windows cannot provide. By offering persistent repo memory as a service, Sverklo helps agents maintain continuity across sessions.

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Xiaomi MiMo-V2.5
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Xiaomi MiMo-V2.5 is an open-source long-context language model release aimed at builders who need commercially usable, fine-tunable AI infrastructure. The release was surfaced as MIT licensed, with permission for commercial deployment, continued training, and fine-tuning, plus a reported 1M-token context window. It is useful for teams experimenting with open model deployment, long-document workflows, agent memory, and cost-controlled alternatives to closed frontier APIs. The key appeal is not just model quality, but the permissive packaging around context length, retraining, and production use.

Apollo 2 is Apptronik’s humanoid robot platform built for real-world industrial work and physical AI development. The platform is designed to collect operational data, test embodied intelligence systems, and support partnerships such as Google DeepMind’s Gemini Robotics work. It is relevant for robotics teams, automation leaders, warehouse operators, and AI labs exploring how foundation models can transfer into physical environments. Apollo 2 stands out because it combines a commercial humanoid hardware roadmap with a dedicated Robot Park data factory, creating a practical loop between robot deployment, data generation, and model improvement rather than treating robotics as a purely lab-based demo.

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Google Antigravity
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Google Antigravity is a developer and research agent environment for coordinating AI-assisted work across code, scientific sources, and Gemini-powered workflows. It helps technical teams prototype agentic applications, inspect model outputs, and connect research tasks to practical execution surfaces. Developers, AI researchers, science teams, and advanced product builders can use it to explore how autonomous assistants handle multi-step work with structured context. The platform is especially useful when a workflow needs more than a chat answer, such as retrieving domain knowledge, generating code, and iterating on results. What makes Google Antigravity stand out is its positioning as an agent workspace from Google, combining Gemini ecosystem access with emerging science and developer tooling rather than acting as a generic chatbot interface.

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Windsurf
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Windsurf Editor by Codeium is a cutting-edge AI tool designed to revolutionize coding. With its AI-powered Copilot and Agent features, it collaborates with users seamlessly, enhancing productivity. The Context Engine and multi-file editing capabilities make Windsurf stand out, offering smarter autocomplete, custom templates, and natural language interactions for coding efficiency. Compared to traditional IDEs, Windsurf provides unlimited completions and advanced features to streamline the coding process. Available for Mac, Windows, and Linux, Windsurf is a must-have tool for developers looking to elevate their coding experience with intelligent AI assistance.

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Appaca
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Appaca is an AI workspace for operators that lets teams create and run custom internal tools through a chat-first interface. Instead of handing users a generic app builder, Appaca focuses on business workflows that live inside the platform: operations dashboards, process helpers, connected tools, and lightweight agents that understand company context. It is useful for founders, agencies, and ops teams that need bespoke software but do not want to manage hosting, deployment, or maintenance for every workflow. The product surfaced on Show HN on 2026-06-26 after pivoting from no-code and agent-builder concepts into a workspace for internal operations. Its official site describes building and running internal tools in minutes with AI agents that understand business workflows.

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UiPath
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UiPath is an enterprise automation platform for building, orchestrating, and governing AI agents, robotic process automation, and human-in-the-loop workflows. It helps operations, finance, support, IT, and compliance teams automate repetitive business processes while keeping approvals, audit trails, and exception handling under control. Teams can use UiPath to connect legacy systems, extract data, route work, monitor processes, and coordinate software robots with newer AI agent capabilities. The platform is best for large organizations that need automation at production scale rather than one-off scripts. UiPath stands out because it combines mature RPA infrastructure with agent orchestration, making it practical for companies that want AI-driven work without losing enterprise governance.

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MCP-identity
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MCP-identity is an open-source protocol utility for adding per-request cryptographic user attestation to MCP servers. Its README explains that OAuth can prove a user authenticated at the session level, but does not prove that a specific MCP tool request came from that user or an authorized context. The project is useful for developers running MCP servers, agent platforms, internal automation, and enterprise integrations where assistants act on behalf of humans and need stronger accountability. MCP-identity is timely because MCP adoption is spreading into real workflows, and trust boundaries around agent tool calls are still immature. By focusing on signed per-request attestations, it tackles a narrow but important security gap in the agent ecosystem.

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Appctl
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Appctl is an open-source framework for turning an existing application, API documentation, or database into safe, auditable LLM tools. It is aimed at developers who want an assistant to perform real actions inside their own systems without handing the model unrestricted access. The project exposes application operations through a controlled MCP-style layer, then lets users interact from a terminal or web chat. That makes it useful for internal admin panels, CRUD dashboards, support workflows, and automation experiments where traceability matters. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and fits the growing pattern of teams wrapping operational software with agent-ready tool interfaces instead of building entirely new AI apps.

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Web Researcher MCP
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Web Researcher MCP is a Model Context Protocol server that gives AI assistants source-grounded web research instead of relying on snippets or closed, pre-synthesized search answers. It can search the broader web or restrict research to trusted domains such as medical journals, court databases, news outlets, or academic sources, then analyze full pages and return working links and citations. The tool is for developers, researchers, and agent builders who want citation-aware retrieval inside MCP-compatible assistants. It is notable now because many agents still hallucinate references or cite shallow search summaries, while this project focuses on verifiable source access as an installable research capability for local and hosted agent workflows.

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Agent Zero
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Agent Zero is an open-source agentic AI framework built for people who want autonomous assistants that can plan, create tools, self-correct, and execute multi-step workflows with transparency. Its positioning is stronger than a simple chatbot because it emphasizes operational autonomy, custom tool creation, and the ability to run work inside its own controlled environment. That makes it relevant for developers, operators, and automation-focused teams experimenting with more capable AI systems that need to do more than answer questions. The open-source angle also matters because it gives technical users more control over how agents behave, what they can access, and how workflows are extended. For anyone building practical autonomous systems instead of prompt-only experiences, Agent Zero is a serious AI agents tool worth tracking.

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Kage
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Kage is a collaborative memory framework for AI agents that gives teams a verified, shared recall layer instead of isolated, forgetful sessions. It is aimed at builders running multiple agents across projects who need decisions, research, commands, and lessons to survive beyond a single chat window. The product positions itself as shared verified memory: one agent learns and the rest can recall it, which is especially useful for coding agents, research workflows, and operational assistants that repeat context-gathering. It is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and has a public product homepage explaining the agent-memory problem directly, making it a timely fit for Smartoolbox's AI agents and productivity categories.

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Merlin Community
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Merlin Community is a local-first deduplication engine for reducing repeated context in LLM and agent workflows. The open-source edition includes a lite engine plus integrations such as an MCP server, VS Code extension, and Claude Code hook, while the project notes larger enterprise performance work separately. It is useful for developers who repeatedly feed long sessions, RAG chunks, or repository context into models and want to cut wasted tokens without sending telemetry to a hosted service. The README cites measured chunk-level dedup gains on agent sessions and RAG pipelines. It is notable now because it addresses a concrete cost problem in agent tooling: reducing redundant input before it reaches the model.

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Agent-QA
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Agent-QA by Vostride is an open-source end-to-end testing tool for web and mobile apps that lets teams describe tests in natural language instead of brittle selector scripts. Its agentic runtime interprets visible roles, labels, screen state, and prior execution memory so product teams and coding agents can catch regressions before releases ship. The tool is useful for developers, QA engineers, and AI-assisted engineering teams that want test coverage to move at the same speed as generated code. Agent-QA is notable now because it appeared as a fresh Show HN launch and directly targets a growing bottleneck: AI can write features quickly, but teams still need repeatable, understandable tests that agents and humans can review together.

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1X NEO
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1X NEO is a humanoid home robot built to help with physical tasks through AI-driven perception, mobility, and manipulation. It is designed for households and robotics early adopters who want an embodied assistant rather than another screen-based productivity tool. NEO can be positioned around chores, remote assistance, home monitoring, and future general-purpose domestic automation as the underlying models and robotics stack improve. The digest signal came from the current wave of humanoid AI activity, where robots are becoming a practical product category rather than a lab demo. 1X NEO stands out because it targets the home directly, combining humanoid hardware with AI control systems for everyday environments.

This is a weekend project that spiraled out of control. I was originally trying to get Claude to play a ROM of the SNES SimCity. I struggled with it and that led me to Micropolis (the open-sourced SimCity engine) and was able to get it to work by bolting on an API.<p>The weekend hack turned into a headless city simulation platform where anyone can get an API key (no signup) and have their AI agent play mayor. The simulation runs the real Micropolis engine inside Cloudflare Durable Objects, one per city. Every city is public and browsable on the site.<p>LLMs are awful at the spatial stuff, which sort of makes it extra fun as you try to control them when they scatter buildings randomly and struggle with power lines and roads. A little like dealing with a toddler.<p>There&#x27;s a full REST API and an MCP server, so you can point Claude Code or Cursor at it directly. You can usually get agents building in seconds.<p>Website: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hallucinatingsplines.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hallucinatingsplines.com</a><p>API docs: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hallucinatingsplines.com&#x2F;docs" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hallucinatingsplines.com&#x2F;docs</a><p>GitHub: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;andrewedunn&#x2F;hallucinating-splines" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;andrewedunn&#x2F;hallucinating-splines</a><p>Future ideas: Let multiple agents play a single city and see how they step all over each other, or a &quot;conquest mode&quot; where you can earn points and spawn disasters on other cities.

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Agent.ai
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Agent.ai is a professional network and marketplace for discovering, building and sharing AI agents. The platform lets users browse agents for business tasks, publish their own agent workflows and connect with an ecosystem centered on practical agent use cases. It is useful for founders, operators, marketers and builders who want ready-made AI agents or a distribution surface for agent products. Agent.ai stands out by treating agents as a searchable professional network rather than only a developer framework or private automation tool. For Smartoolbox, it belongs in AI agents because it helps people find task-specific agents and learn what agent workflows are already available.

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