Start with products
See the public-facing surfaces, understand what they do, and open the most relevant project or demo next.
This site is the public front door for the ecosystem. It explains how the major layers fit together, highlights the most relevant surfaces, and routes different kinds of visitors to the right next step without forcing them to understand every repo first.
The storefront should route visitors by intent instead of dumping every repo at once.
See the public-facing surfaces, understand what they do, and open the most relevant project or demo next.
See the ecosystem layers first, then jump into GitHub for the deeper implementation detail.
Understand the fast mobile entry layer for capture, trigger, and simple utility flows.
Learn about the operator shell as part of the architecture, not as the default casual visitor path.
The public site explains the layers in plain language, while GitHub stays the place for low-level technical detail.
These cards establish the first public catalog structure for the storefront.
The operator-facing shell for receiving work, routing requests, and monitoring results across the ecosystem.
The fast mobile companion for capturing ideas, triggering recurring flows, and routing lightweight actions into ScheduleOS or downstream surfaces.
Flagship tools and experiments sit on top of the architecture and give visitors concrete places to explore next, including Graphify and related public repos.
The storefront should make room for research-oriented surfaces without turning the homepage into a repo dump.
Research surfaces, vertical experiments, and ecosystem-adjacent projects should be grouped by theme and linked selectively. Explore children-of-israel-agent-swarm and agentic-os for deeper technical detail.
ShortcutForge represents the fast-entry mobile layer: capture, trigger, return, and only open deeper operator workflows when needed.
Use mobile for quick notes, one-tap actions, and small recurring workflows.
Interpretation-heavy or queue-aware workflows should route into ScheduleOS instead of being forced into a purely mobile UX.
Long-form thinking on AI, systems design, and what happens to computing's foundational abstractions when the system starts to think.
A layer-by-layer examination of files, apps, browsers, operating systems, hardware, and identity โ and what happens to each when intelligence becomes a system property. Parts 1 & 2 available now.