Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 1287 answers
Periodically review and rebalance your agent portfolio — retire underperformers, invest in high-value agents.
Periodically review and rebalance your agent portfolio — retire underperformers, invest in high-value agents.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
New agents can inherit properties and patterns from existing successful agents rather than being built from scratch.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Create reusable templates for common agent patterns to accelerate creation of new agents.
Some agents outlive their usefulness but persist because removing them feels risky or costly. Legacy agents consume resources, create confusion, and block the deployment of better alternatives. Identifying them is the first step toward a clean epistemic portfolio.
Some agents outlive their usefulness but persist because removing them feels risky or costly. Legacy agents consume resources, create confusion, and block the deployment of better alternatives. Identifying them is the first step toward a clean epistemic portfolio.
Some agents outlive their usefulness but persist because removing them feels risky or costly. Legacy agents consume resources, create confusion, and block the deployment of better alternatives. Identifying them is the first step toward a clean epistemic portfolio.
Some agents outlive their usefulness but persist because removing them feels risky or costly. Legacy agents consume resources, create confusion, and block the deployment of better alternatives. Identifying them is the first step toward a clean epistemic portfolio.
Some agents outlive their usefulness but persist because removing them feels risky or costly. Legacy agents consume resources, create confusion, and block the deployment of better alternatives. Identifying them is the first step toward a clean epistemic portfolio.
Some agents outlive their usefulness but persist because removing them feels risky or costly. Legacy agents consume resources, create confusion, and block the deployment of better alternatives. Identifying them is the first step toward a clean epistemic portfolio.
Documentation should evolve with the agent — outdated docs are worse than no docs.