The Hermes Agent desktop app is here, and this is a big deal.
Agents just left the terminal.
For the first time you get a clean ChatGPT style interface.
Skills, tools, messaging, artifacts, all in one window.
No CLI. No setup hell.
Anyone can run an agent now.
This is the evolution that takes agents from a developer tool to something everyone can actually use.
I am setting up my 6th Hermes agent in it right now.
Full review video dropping soon.
You are not ready for what these can do.
they are trying to kill cursor and lovableโฆ and every startup and application โ as Iโve warned
Infrastructure companies eventually try to win the platform game, then they learn and take out all their partners on the app layer
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.
The laptop hasn't changed in 30 years. NVIDIA just changed it
RTX Spark is their first PC chip ever.
- RTX 5070 level GPU
- 128GB unified memory
- 1 petaflop of local AI
- thin, light, barely throttles unplugged
Your AI agent lives on the machine. 24/7. No cloud.
This is step one of the agentic AI PC, and everyone else is about to copy it.
๐โโ๏ธ I've gamified my own run so I can race my own ghost with the Meta Ray-Ban Display.
I built a web app for the glasses, loaded a previous GPX from Strava, and dropped game mechanics on top.
Pick up coins when you keep pace, sprint zones reward extra points if you push, and a mini leaderboard on the lens shows how you're tracking against your past self in real time.
Best part: it actually works. Seeing your ghost 20 m ahead is a way stronger nudge than any number on a watch. ๐
Anthropic engineer:
"You're not supposed to prompt Claude. You're supposed to build a system that prompts itself."
this is one of the best workflows I've seen in a long time
in this video she breaks down exactly how most people are using Claude:
- the 14% you lose to CLAUDE.md before typing a word
- the plugins that 95% of users have never installed
- the workflows that run without you typing a single prompt
- why typing one prompt and closing the tab is leaving 90% on the table
if you've been using Claude for months and still start every session from scratch, you have at least 28 untouched features. probably 30
instead of another show tonight, watch this
make sure to bookmark it before it gets lost in your feed
full guide in the article below
Obsidian set up in 30 minutes = never losing a good idea again.
Five folders. Four settings. Three daily habits.
Every idea captured at the speed of thought.
Every note findable in under 10 seconds.
Every insight connected to everything related to it permanently.
The second brain that compounds from day one.
Read this and Bookmark it now.
Just want to make this clear:
We didn't make Hermes Agent to be a "starts with nothing, you work it all out" agent. This is not the minimalist, start from nothing, agent.
We want Hermes to work out of the box for most people. So you aren't spending weeks just getting the agent to work, or have the capabilities you need.
This means that yes, there are more built in things then something like nanoclaw or pi, which start with nothing, and you just have to figure it out.
That is an intentional design decision.
You can from the modest baseline that has capabilities that are likely broader than you need, but not egregious, take it from there if you want to tinker with it.
Run `hermes skills config` or `hermes tools` to disable whatever you want.
We even have a way to upload your whole "Agent" as a github repo, so you can install hermes fresh with your exact setup again later or share them.
We have a massive interface for extensions so you can tinker with it to infinity.
But if you don't want to become an agent engineer - with Hermes, you don't have to.
THE WINNER OF THE ANTHROPIC HACKATHON JUST OPEN SOURCED HIS ENTIRE AI CODING SETUP FOR FREE. 183 AGENT SKILLS, 48 SUB-AGENTS AND 79 READY-MADE COMMANDS.
He spent 10 months on it, won $15K in API credits, then released the whole stack under MIT license.