Everything you need to understand and customize Hermes Agent — self-evolving skills, three-tier memory, GEPA optimization, and going from 1 to 10 specialized agents that work for you 24/7.
A reusable Hermes skill for decisions that are too expensive to wing: architecture choices, launch strategy, debugging, pricing, product direction, and any task where a fast answer could create expensive downstream damage.
The literal no-code stack for an agent-run clipping channel: one open-source agent (Hermes Desktop) and one clipping engine (Clipit). You feed it a stream VOD, it returns scored and captioned clips, picks the best ones, writes titles, queues posts, and messages you for approval before anything goes live. No terminal required.
Discover the power of the Hermes dashboard as a daily operating surface. The community obsesses over SOUL.md and overnight loops, but the unglamorous browser tab at localhost:9119 is where you actually keep a 24/7 agent healthy — Sessions, MCP, Skills, Cron, Analytics, Logs, and System.
A complete roadmap of Hermes Agent mastery, from your first one-shot prompt to a multi-profile system that runs your business without you. 15 levels across three phases — foundation, leverage, and autonomy — each with what it unlocks, how to set it up, and the mistake that trips people up. Plus the token economics that keep it affordable. Verified against Hermes Agent v0.17.0.
A complete walkthrough of how Hermes is put together — installation, model routing, terminal backends, messaging, context and memory engines — and how its self-improving loop turns conversations into permanent upgrades.
A layer-by-layer analysis of Hermes mapped to operating-system concepts — memory, profiles, Kanban, cron, /goal, skills, the Curator, Tool Search, the Gateway, voice, and security — plus the compounding effect, token economics, and how it compares to other frameworks.
Most AI memory is a sticky note. This flow breaks down an 11-layer context architecture for Hermes Agent — identity, facts, procedures, session archives, compression, and scheduled routines — and the distinctions that decide whether your agent actually remembers how you work.
A no-nonsense rundown of the real Hermes configuration that moves the needle — identity, memory, profiles, cron, gateway, MCP, skills, context files, delegation, and plugins. Real config keys and commands only, no made-up env vars.
Ten domain-agnostic Hermes setups — mission control, event triggers, cron jobs, structured /goal, sub-agents, Telegram workspaces, Kanban, skills, webhooks, and separate agents — that turn a chat window into a system that runs while you sleep.