@0xViviennn I couldn't agree more. I'm completely fed up with interfaces that are all absolute clones of each other when it comes to fonts, effects, and so on. The '90s cyberspace style that Hermes has is in a league of its own.
@NousResearch Answering myself: this @sudo_overflow guide on how to secure and connect to a remote Hermes instance has been perfect.
(My two cents of paranoia: I bound it to the Tailscale IP instead of 0.0.0.0 so the port is tailnet-only).
https://t.co/QCcOkNGpm7
@NousResearch Answering myself: this @sudo_overflow guide on how to secure and connect to a remote Hermes instance has been perfect.
(My two cents of paranoia: I bound it to the Tailscale IP instead of 0.0.0.0 so the port is tailnet-only).
https://t.co/QCcOkNGpm7
The next evolution of Hermes Agent is here!
Introducing Hermes Desktop: everything you love about Hermes, now native on your machine.
First demoed in Jensen's GTC keynote, it's now in public preview.
@LLMJunky This lines up with what Iβd expect. Agents catch local issues well, then start getting shaky when the answer depends on knowing why the codebase is shaped that way.
@meathill1 Maintenance is where skills make the most sense to me. Itβs mostly boring repeated judgment, which is exactly the kind of thing you donβt want to improvise every time.
@lihanc02 βchange as few files as possibleβ should probably be near the top of every agent prompt. a lot of the pain starts when it gets creative in files nobody asked it to touch.