agentfolio
Skill for discovering and researching autonomous AI agents, tools, and ecosystems using the AgentFolio directory.
What this skill does
# AgentFolio
**Role**: Autonomous Agent Discovery Guide
Use this skill when you want to **discover, compare, and research autonomous AI agents** across ecosystems.
AgentFolio is a curated directory at https://agentfolio.io that tracks agent frameworks, products, and tools.
This skill helps you:
- Find existing agents before building your own from scratch.
- Map the landscape of agent frameworks and hosted products.
- Collect concrete examples and benchmarks for agent capabilities.
## Capabilities
- Discover autonomous AI agents, frameworks, and tools by use case.
- Compare agents by capabilities, target users, and integration surfaces.
- Identify gaps in the market or inspiration for new skills/workflows.
- Gather example agent behavior and UX patterns for your own designs.
- Track emerging trends in agent architectures and deployments.
## How to Use AgentFolio
1. **Open the directory**
- Visit `https://agentfolio.io` in your browser.
- Optionally filter by category (e.g., Dev Tools, Ops, Marketing, Productivity).
2. **Search by intent**
- Start from the problem you want to solve:
- “customer support agents”
- “autonomous coding agents”
- “research / analysis agents”
- Use keywords in the AgentFolio search bar that match your domain or workflow.
3. **Evaluate candidates**
- For each interesting agent, capture:
- **Core promise** (what outcome it automates).
- **Input / output shape** (APIs, UI, data sources).
- **Autonomy model** (one-shot, multi-step, tool-using, human-in-the-loop).
- **Deployment model** (SaaS, self-hosted, browser, IDE, etc.).
4. **Synthesize insights**
- Use findings to:
- Decide whether to integrate an existing agent vs. build your own.
- Borrow successful UX and safety patterns.
- Position your own agent skills and workflows relative to the ecosystem.
## Example Workflows
### 1) Landscape scan before building a new agent
- Define the problem: “autonomous test failure triage for CI pipelines”.
- Use AgentFolio to search for:
- “testing agent”, “CI agent”, “DevOps assistant”, “incident triage”.
- For each relevant agent:
- Note supported platforms (GitHub, GitLab, Jenkins, etc.).
- Capture how they explain autonomy and safety boundaries.
- Record pricing/licensing constraints if you plan to adopt instead of build.
### 2) Competitive and inspiration research for a new skill
- If you plan to add a new skill (e.g., observability agent, security agent):
- Use AgentFolio to find similar agents and features.
- Extract 3–5 concrete patterns you want to emulate or avoid.
- Translate those patterns into clear requirements for your own skill.
### 3) Vendor shortlisting
- When choosing between multiple agent vendors:
- Use AgentFolio entries as a neutral directory.
- Build a comparison table (columns: capabilities, integrations, pricing, trust & security).
- Use that table to drive a more formal evaluation or proof-of-concept.
## Example Prompts
Use these prompts when working with this skill in an AI coding agent:
- “Use AgentFolio to find 3 autonomous AI agents focused on code review. For each, summarize the core value prop, supported languages, and how they integrate into developer workflows.”
- “Scan AgentFolio for agents that help with customer support triage. List the top options, their target customer size (SMB vs. enterprise), and any notable UX patterns.”
- “Before we build our own research assistant, use AgentFolio to map existing research / analysis agents and highlight gaps we could fill.”
## When to Use
This skill is applicable when you need to **discover or compare autonomous AI agents** instead of building in a vacuum:
- At the start of a new agent or workflow project.
- When evaluating vendors or tools to integrate.
- When you want inspiration or best practices from existing agent products.
## Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
Related in General
modeling-omnistudio-epc-catalog
IncludedSalesforce Industries CME EPC product-modeling skill for Product2-based catalog creation. Use when creating EPC products, configuring product attributes, building offer bundles with Product Child Items, or reviewing EPC DataPack JSON metadata for product catalog changes. TRIGGER when: user creates or updates Product2 EPC records, AttributeAssignment payloads, AttributeMetadata/AttributeDefaultValues, Offer bundles, or ProductChildItem relationships. DO NOT TRIGGER when: designing OmniScripts/FlexCards/Integration Procedures (use building-omnistudio-omniscript, building-omnistudio-flexcard, or building-omnistudio-integration-procedure), implementing Apex business logic (use generating-apex), or troubleshooting deployment pipelines (use deploying-metadata).
relationship-science-coach
IncludedUse this skill for direct, practical adult relationship coaching: couples conflict, repair, trust, marriage, dating, flirting, attachment patterns, emotional connection, sex, desire differences, eroticism, kink negotiation, affection, love languages, breakups, and long-term passion. Draw on Gottman, EFT and Hold Me Tight, attachment science, modern sex research, Perel, Nagoski, Kerner, Schnarch, Love and Stosny, and flexible love-language tools. Be concrete and low-hedge. Redirect only for imminent danger, abuse, coercive control, minors, non-consent, self-harm, stalking, or medical/legal/psychiatric decisions.
building-sf-integrations
IncludedSalesforce integration architecture and runtime plumbing with 120-point scoring. Use this skill to set up Named Credentials, External Credentials, External Services, REST/SOAP callout patterns, Platform Events, and Change Data Capture. TRIGGER when: user sets up Named Credentials, External Services, REST/SOAP callouts, Platform Events, CDC, or touches .namedCredential-meta.xml files. DO NOT TRIGGER when: Connected App/OAuth config (use configuring-connected-apps), Apex-only logic (use generating-apex), or data import/export (use handling-sf-data).
venue-templates
IncludedAccess comprehensive LaTeX templates, formatting requirements, and submission guidelines for major scientific publication venues (Nature, Science, PLOS, IEEE, ACM), academic conferences (NeurIPS, ICML, CVPR, CHI), research posters, and grant proposals (NSF, NIH, DOE, DARPA). This skill should be used when preparing manuscripts for journal submission, conference papers, research posters, or grant proposals and need venue-specific formatting requirements and templates.
let-fate-decide
IncludedDraws the 12 Houses of the Zodiac Tarot spread to inject entropy into planning when prompts are vague, ambiguous, or casually delegated. Interprets the spread to guide next steps. Use when the user says 'let fate decide', 'YOLO', 'whatever', 'idk', or other nonchalant phrases, makes Yu-Gi-Oh references, or when you are about to arbitrarily pick between multiple reasonable approaches. Prefer over ask-questions-if-underspecified when the user's tone is casual or playful rather than precision-seeking.
net-ops
IncludedCross-platform network troubleshooting (Windows, macOS, Linux) via local or remote shell. Use for: DNS broken, can't resolve hostnames, nslookup/dig works but apps fail, NRPT, WFP, scutil, /etc/resolver, systemd-resolved, /etc/resolv.conf, NetworkManager, VPN DNS leak residue (ProtonVPN/Mullvad/WireGuard/AnyConnect), AV/firewall blocking DNS or DoH, Tailscale DNS interaction, intermittent connectivity, remote diagnostics over SSH.