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.
A complete map of the eight loops Hermes Agent runs simultaneously — from the millisecond core loop to the weekly Curator — how they nest across timescales, and what breaks when any one of them fails.
xurl gives your Hermes agent direct access to X — searching, reading, and publishing. On its own it's just an execution tool. Paired with /goal, research, and memory, it becomes a structured, repeatable content system.
A complete guide to Hermes' /goal command — what it does, every subcommand, how to write strong measurable goals, the recommended workflow, best practices, and ready-to-use example prompts.
A full hour-by-hour map of the autonomous overnight cycle — from session close and self-improvement to knowledge ingestion, the morning briefing, the infrastructure behind it, and the security layers that make unattended operation safe.
Pair Grok's native real-time X access with Hermes Agent's persistent scheduling and Telegram delivery to build a 24/7 intelligence agent that drafts a morning brief before you wake up — using your existing SuperGrok subscription.
21 copy-paste /goal commands across 6 categories — research, lead gen, content, email, operations, and development — plus a Chief of Staff setup that runs your entire morning ops autonomously.
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.
A complete guide to SOUL.md — where it sits in the prompt stack, what belongs in it, token economics, advanced role templates, /personality overlays, profiles, and the iterative method for growing an effective agent identity.
Why a SOUL.md is an operating contract, not a personality hack — plus a sanitized, copy-paste template you can adapt to make your Hermes Agent behave like an operator instead of a chatbot.
Why a single 170-line markdown file — not a secret model or magic framework — is what makes a Hermes Agent push back, hold you accountable, and act like an operator instead of a chatbot.
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.
A hands-on walkthrough of Hermes Desktop — the native Electron app that wraps the full Hermes Agent runtime. Same config, keys, sessions, skills, and memory as the CLI and TUI, with a real settings UI, live tool output, a file browser, voice mode, and remote-backend support.
An event-driven engineering workflow where four specialized Hermes agents handle ticket intake, coding, review, and CI — while humans keep merge authority. Routine tickets go from intake to reviewed PR in about four hours for roughly $12 in AI spend.
A community-sourced collection of lesser-known Hermes Agent commands and behaviors — cross-platform /handoff, session resume, context compression levers, local browser via CDP, the REST API, the native desktop app, /steer mid-task, and delegating to Claude Code.
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.
An end-to-end guide to running Hermes Agent 24/7: installation, model selection, messaging, the dashboard most people use wrong, use cases, the self-improvement loop, and security.
If you already pay for X Premium, you already have Grok. Connect it to Hermes with one OAuth login — no API key — and the agent reads X for you, runs browser tasks, and executes multi-skill playbooks from a single slash command. A tour of X Search, Browse.sh, and Skill Bundles.
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 three-profile Hermes setup where Scout finds signals, Analyst synthesizes through NotebookLM, and Briefer delivers a morning brief — coordinated through a shared Obsidian vault. Roughly $19-27/month, one evening to set up.
Go from a single Hermes install to a control room orchestrating a team of specialist agents on one cheap VPS. Covers install, memory and SOUL.md, the orchestrator pattern, messaging surfaces, cron, and the operator mindset that makes it all compound.
One agent is the wrong unit once work grows teeth. This field manual shows how to use Hermes Kanban — boards, tasks, claims, blocks, schedules, and receipts — to give long-running multi-agent work durable coordination that survives a dead shell.
Hermes Dreaming is a staged, artifact-first self-improvement engine for Hermes Agent. It proposes changes as reviewable artifacts you can diff, validate, apply, or discard — turning self-improvement into a receipt trail instead of silent mutation.
A step-by-step guide to building a self-learning Hermes agent that trades Polymarket 5-minute up/down crypto markets — VPS setup, Telegram control, CLOB v2 execution, and a self-improving loop that adjusts probability estimates from live results.
Hermes AgentTelegramXVPSPolymarket
YanXbt5 min
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