A browser side panel that pipes the current tab's web context into a locally running Hermes Agent runtime. For builders who want their local agent to see what the browser sees without shipping data to a hosted service.
Explore the radar’s memory
Every pick we’ve ever shipped, plotted as a living constellation. Picks cluster by topic; threads between clusters reveal cross-topic connections. Zoom in to expand a cluster into its picks — drag, filter, click through to the brief.
All picks
Archive results
-
abundantbeing/hermes-browser-extension
-
TabArena
A leaderboard benchmarking tabular ML models head to head. Useful for anyone choosing between gradient boosting variants and newer approaches for structured data problems, or who wants a reference point before committing to a modeling stack.
-
digitvest.com
Pre-built starter websites aimed at SaaS founders who want something live before committing to a custom build. Thin on specifics but targets the early validation phase where spending a week on a landing page is a bad trade.
-
Salestrics AI-Native Email Beta
A sales email tool positioning itself as an all-in-one alternative to fragmented CRM and sequencing stacks. Early beta, unclear differentiation beyond the consolidation pitch. Worth watching only if email-centric sales tooling is an active pain point right now.
-
Panniantong/Agent-Reach
Gives an AI agent read and search access to Twitter, Reddit, YouTube, GitHub, Bilibili, and XiaoHongShu through a single CLI, with no API fees. Useful for any builder wiring up an agent that needs to pull real-world social and video content without wrestling platform SDKs.
-
The Model Does Not Need Memory. The Situation Does.
A short essay reframing how to think about memory in LLM-based systems — the argument is that the context window, not the model, is the right place to invest in persistence. Useful framing for anyone designing stateful agent architectures right now.
-
ruvnet/metaharness
Scaffolds a fully wired AI agent harness — npx CLI, MCP server, memory, learning loop, and witness-signed releases — in one go. Targets teams building branded, production-grade agents on top of Claude Code, Codex, or hardware-isolated sandboxes. Worth a serious look if you are shipping agent infrastructure this month.
-
SyncBooster
Chat-driven social media post creation and publishing across platforms. Positions itself as an AI-native alternative to Buffer or Hootsuite for founders who would rather type a prompt than fill out a scheduling form.
-
AISight
Audits your website from the perspective of AI answer engines — checking how LLM-based search surfaces like Perplexity or ChatGPT browse and represent your content. Useful for founders who care about AI-driven discoverability, not just traditional SEO.
-
LuciferCore: The Redemption Arc — From a Naive Prototype to a Battle-Tested .NET Framework
A write-up tracing the evolution of a .NET framework from naive prototype to something the author considers production-ready. More post-mortem than tool launch, but .NET teams building internal frameworks will find the architectural lessons worth skimming.
-
AI Engineer Meets AI Engineer
A live dispatch from an AI engineering conference, capturing first-day impressions and hallway-track observations. Useful ambient signal on what practitioners are actually building and arguing about, but no actionable tools or decisions land in this piece.
-
Stratagems #5: Leo Walked Into an AI-Powered Burning House. He Walked Out With a Client.
A narrative piece that uses the 36 Stratagems framework to reframe how founders can use AI tools to turn a competitor's crisis into a sales opportunity. Story-driven, not technical. Worth a skim if competitive positioning is on the agenda this week.
-
18 Hot Takes On Where AI is Headed Next
A newsletter-style roundup of predictions on AI market direction, covering agents, commoditization, and where the margin goes next. Background reading rather than an actionable tool, but the takes are concrete enough to be worth skimming on a slow afternoon.
-
PieterPost MCP
Hooks an AI agent into physical postal mail so it can send real letters, postcards, or packages without a human in the loop. If your product touches anything that needs a paper trail or physical touchpoint, this is the MCP connector to wire it up.
-
Enterprise LLM Gateway: Route, govern, and secure your AI traffic
A write-up covering how to build or buy an LLM gateway that routes traffic across multiple AI providers, enforces cost controls, and logs requests for compliance. Useful orientation if your team is juggling OpenAI, Anthropic, and Groq and starting to feel the chaos.
-
Robot Learning: A Tutorial
An interactive browser-based tutorial covering robot learning fundamentals, tied to the LeRobot open-source robotics stack. Aimed at people who want to understand imitation learning and reinforcement learning for physical robots without setting up a local environment first.
-
Reconciling the Distributed System: How the AI Engineer World's Fair Engineered Human Connection
A writeup from the 2026 AI Engineer World's Fair orientation event, covering how the conference tried to create in-person connection at scale. More event recap than technical content. Skip if you were not there and are looking for tools or implementation ideas.
-
Qwen Image Edit Rapid AIO (NSFW)
A hosted image editing demo wrapping Qwen's vision model with NSFW content filters removed. Thin wrapper over a public model with no visible differentiation beyond the content policy change. Worth knowing exists; not worth a Saturday.
-
MagicQuill
A brush-based image editing demo that lets you add, erase, or recolor content in a photo by drawing rough strokes and describing what you want. The interaction model is closer to Photoshop than to a prompt box, which makes it genuinely different from the usual inpaint-by-text tools.
-
supabase/mcp
Hooks Supabase directly into AI assistants via the Model Context Protocol, letting agents query your database, manage tables, and run migrations through natural language without leaving the assistant context. Useful for any team already on Supabase who wants to give their AI tooling real backend access.
-
This Is Software’s iPhone Moment
An opinion piece arguing that AI represents a fundamental shift in software creation, using the democratization of photography as its central analogy. No tool, no code, no benchmark — purely editorial. Worth reading if you enjoy that genre of argument, but skip if you are already sold on the premise.
-
Stratagems #2: Derek Shaw Walked Into Another AI Promise. The Pipeline Had a Better Plan.
A narrative piece framing AI pipeline design through a fictional scenario. Reads more like editorial fiction than a technical resource. Worth a glance if you enjoy strategy-flavored takes on AI system design, but there is no tool or actionable output here.
-
Top 8 API CLI Tools Every Developer Should Know in 2026
A listicle covering eight CLI tools for working with APIs from the terminal. Likely covers familiar names with a thin new-year framing. Worth a skim if you have a new team member who lives in curl and wants a structured comparison.
-
Hackathon Winners Scoop $35,000 In Cash And Credits
A recap of the AI Engineer World's Fair Hackathon results, covering winning projects and prize distribution. Useful if you want to see what kinds of AI builds are winning competitive formats right now, but there is no tool or product to evaluate here.
-
Kolors Virtual Try-On
A browser demo that lets you drop a clothing image and a person photo and get a realistic try-on composite back. No account, no SDK, just upload and go. Useful for any e-commerce or fashion SaaS team evaluating whether AI garment try-on is ready for their product yet.