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GitHub - Kaelio/ktx: ktx is an executable context layer for data and analytics agents 🐙 Allow Claude Code, Codex, and any AI agent to query data accurately through MCP with skills, memory and a semantic layer GitHub - ThatXliner/xtras: Xliner's Claude Code Skills GitHub - flightdeckhq/flightdeck: Observability and control plane for AI agents. GitHub - search-router/simple-search: Open-source reference app on top of the Search Router API: FastAPI + Jinja metasearch service with pluggable backends, deterministic mocks (no API key needed), RTL UI, Redis cache, and a demo ads cabinet. CSP Radar GitHub - Light-Heart-Labs/DreamServer: Turn your PC, Mac, or Linux box into an AI server. LLM inference, chat UI, voice, agents, workflows, RAG, and image generation. GitHub - Diplomat-ai/diplomat-agent-ts: What can your TypeScript AI agent do to the real world? Scan your code. See which tool calls have zero checks Code Block Selector - Visual Studio Marketplace Prometheus dependency graph — interactive showcase | Riftmap Show HN: I made a vi-like modal keyboard plugin for Figma GitHub - run-llama/liteparse: A fast, helpful, and open-source document parser GitHub - dalemyers/Roar: A macOS CLI tool for notifications GitHub - district-solutions/open-agent-tools-coder: Enables small-to-large self-hosted ai models to use local source code when running tool-calling agentic workloads. We actively data mine 20,900+ (2+ TB) popular github repos using large and small ai models to create reuseable: json, markdown and parquet files for local-first tool-calling models. GitHub - progapandist/stripeek: A local TUI proxy for real-time Stripe API debugging, built for navigating complex payloads fast. 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GitHub - ThatXliner/gah: Git Add Hunk, built for agents to use GitHub - harmont-dev/harmont-cli: Command-line client for the Harmont CI platform GitHub - brooksmcmillin/mcp-authflow: OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server framework for MCP servers GitHub - javaid-codes/audit-supply-chain-agents GitHub - amorey/gochan: A small library of common channel architectures for Go, inspired by Rust GitHub - arifozgun/OpenGem: Free, Open-Source AI API Gateway with Gemini, OpenAI & Anthropic Compatibility in 1 file GitHub - Pranesh950/BioPetals: 🌸 Run BIOxAI models at home, BitTorrent-style. Fine-tuning and inference up to 10x faster than offloading GitHub - cnguyen14/bounty-doctor: Diagnose a GitHub bounty issue before you waste hours: detects honeypot scam repos, AI-bot attempt swarms, and stale contests. 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Typing Mastery — climb toward 100+ WPM, deliberately GitHub - Andebugulin/Awareen GitHub - fayzan123/claude-workflow-composer: Visual desktop app for composing multi-agent coding workflows. Drag agents, attach skills and MCPs, wire handoffs, export to .claude/ GitHub - StackOneHQ/stack-nudge We hardened an LLM agent. Each defense we added made it more exploitable. GitHub - alkait/WhatsKept: Agent-queryable WhatsApp history from an iOS backup — a single Go binary. GitHub - octelium/cordium: Open-source, general-purpose sandbox platform for devs and AI agents that provides identity-based secure access to infrastructure without credentials. GitHub - scosman/videowright: Build animated explainer videos with your coding agent GitHub - dipankar/dscode: The code editor you can take apart. GitHub - zoharbabin/web-researcher-mcp: MCP server (Go) for AI assistants: web search, content extraction, academic/patent/news research. Multi-provider routing, 4-tier scraping, search lenses. Works with Claude, Cursor, and any MCP client. GitHub - scanaislop/aislop: Catch the slop AI coding agents leave in your code: narrative comments, swallowed exceptions, as-any casts, dead code, oversized functions. 50+ rules across 7 languages (TypeScript, JavaScript, Python, Go, Rust, Ruby, PHP). Sub-second, deterministic, no LLM at runtime. MIT-licensed. GitHub - kouhxp/cheap-im: CPU-only voice agent approximating Thinking Machines' Interaction Models demo GitHub - unprovable/OrchidMantis: Orchid Mantis — standalone framework for Zero-Knowledge Proofs of eXploit (ZKPoX). GitHub - TangibleResearch/Halgorithem: A Algo designed to detect AI Hallucitions GitHub - CarpseDeam/Aura-IDE: An AI coding harness that shaped itself - Planner/Worker agents, repo awareness, surgical edits, validation, recovery, and safe diff approvals. GitHub - chojs23/concord: A feature-rich TUI client for Discord GitHub - aerf-spec/aerf: Agent Evidence Receipt Format (AERF) — an open specification for tamper-evident, independently verifiable records of AI agent actions. GitHub - Jwrede/tokentoll: Catch LLM cost changes in code review. Infracost for LLM spend. GitHub - samchon/ttsc: A `typescript-go` toolchain for compiler-powered plugins and type-safe execution + 500x faster lint integrated into compiler GitHub - Higangssh/homebutler: 🏠 Manage your homelab from chat. Single binary, zero dependencies. GitHub - olalie/tapmap: See where your computer connects and what stands out on a live world map. GitHub - Diplomat-ai/diplomat-agent: What can your AI agent do to the real world? Scan your code. See which tool calls have zero checks GitHub - Bajusz15/beacon: Open-source agent for secure remote access, monitoring, and deploys across home-lab and self-hosted machines like Raspberry Pi, N100, or any Linux server. Open web based TTY or tunnel Home Assistant and other local services securely without opening ports. BigTech AI News - Chrome 应用商店 GitHub - vinhnx/VTCode: VT Code is an open-source coding agent with LLM-native code understanding and robust shell safety. Supports multiple LLM providers with automatic failover and efficient context management. GitHub - Lumen-Labs/brainapi2: BrainAPI is a knowledge graph–powered AI memory layer that transforms unstructured data into structured knowledge, enabling intelligent search, recommendations, and contextual memory for AI agents and applications. GitHub - familiar-software/familiar: Let AI watch you work. Familiar lets your AI update its memory, skills, and knowledge by watching your screen. make sidebar/address bar rounded corner toggleable
Paul Graham's Essays, Stratified
knrz · 2026-06-25 · via Show HN

pgstrata

What if you could pinch to zoom in and out of an essay?

Try pinching on this text!

The best essay isn’t just well-written; it’s about the most important topic you could tell people something surprising about — which usually means describing the most important discovery it was possible to make.

Challenge accepted.

Dedicated to Paul Graham, with love.

Cyrus

  1. How to Convert Between Wealth and Income TaxMay 2026 · 699 words
  2. The Brand AgeMarch 2026 · 7,656 words
  3. The Shape of the Essay FieldJune 2025 · 769 words
  4. Good WritingMay 2025 · 1,645 words
  5. What to DoMarch 2025 · 1,590 words
  6. The Origins of WokenessJanuary 2025 · 6,167 words
  7. Writes and Write-NotsOctober 2024 · 555 words
  8. When To Do What You LoveSeptember 2024 · 1,545 words
  9. Founder ModeSeptember 2024 · 1,244 words
  10. The Right Kind of StubbornJuly 2024 · 1,936 words
  11. The RedditsMarch 2024 · 1,168 words
  12. How to Start GoogleMarch 2024 · 2,826 words
  13. The Best EssayMarch 2024 · 4,338 words
  14. Superlinear ReturnsOctober 2023 · 4,258 words
  15. How to Do Great WorkJuly 2023 · 11,824 words
  16. How to Get New IdeasJanuary 2023 · 147 words
  17. What You (Want to)* WantNovember 2022 · 511 words
  18. The Need to ReadNovember 2022 · 446 words
  19. Alien TruthOctober 2022 · 684 words
  20. What I've Learned from UsersSeptember 2022 · 2,194 words
  21. HeresyApril 2022 · 2,113 words
  22. Putting Ideas into WordsFebruary 2022 · 1,164 words
  23. Is There Such a Thing as Good Taste?November 2021 · 1,123 words
  24. Beyond SmartOctober 2021 · 1,422 words
  25. Weird LanguagesAugust 2021 · 348 words
  26. A Project of One's OwnJune 2021 · 2,510 words
  27. How to Work HardJune 2021 · 3,317 words
  28. An NFT That Saves LivesMay 2021 · 314 words
  29. Crazy New IdeasMay 2021 · 1,326 words
  30. Fierce NerdsMay 2021 · 1,248 words
  31. How People Get Rich NowApril 2021 · 2,583 words
  32. The Real Reason to End the Death PenaltyApril 2021 · 781 words
  33. Write SimplyMarch 2021 · 509 words
  34. Donate UnrestrictedMarch 2021 · 485 words
  35. What I Worked OnFebruary 2021 · 13,810 words
  36. EarnestnessDecember 2020 · 1,671 words
  37. The AirbnbsDecember 2020 · 1,102 words
  38. Billionaires BuildDecember 2020 · 3,425 words
  39. How to Think for YourselfNovember 2020 · 3,448 words
  40. Early WorkOctober 2020 · 2,507 words
  41. Modeling a Wealth TaxAugust 2020 · 421 words
  42. Orthodox PrivilegeJuly 2020 · 650 words
  43. The Four Quadrants of ConformismJuly 2020 · 1,971 words
  44. Coronavirus and CredibilityApril 2020 · 237 words
  45. How to Write UsefullyFebruary 2020 · 2,868 words
  46. Being a NoobJanuary 2020 · 373 words
  47. HatersJanuary 2020 · 1,391 words
  48. The Two Kinds of ModerateDecember 2019 · 668 words
  49. The Lesson to UnlearnDecember 2019 · 4,043 words
  50. Having KidsDecember 2019 · 1,537 words
  51. Fashionable ProblemsDecember 2019 · 190 words
  52. Novelty and HeresyNovember 2019 · 255 words
  53. The Bus Ticket Theory of GeniusNovember 2019 · 2,635 words
  54. General and SurprisingSeptember 2017 · 439 words
  55. Charisma / PowerJanuary 2017 · 121 words
  56. The Risk of DiscoveryJanuary 2017 · 216 words
  57. This Year We Can End the Death Penalty in CaliforniaNovember 2016 · 187 words
  58. How to Make Pittsburgh a Startup HubApril 2016 · 2,636 words
  59. Life is ShortJanuary 2016 · 1,675 words
  60. The RefragmentationJanuary 2016 · 7,198 words
  61. Economic InequalityJanuary 2016 · 3,434 words
  62. Jessica LivingstonNovember 2015 · 1,968 words
  63. Write Like You TalkOctober 2015 · 709 words
  64. A Way to Detect BiasOctober 2015 · 565 words
  65. Default Alive or Default Dead?October 2015 · 1,498 words
  66. Why It's Safe for Founders to Be NiceAugust 2015 · 785 words
  67. Change Your NameAugust 2015 · 758 words
  68. What Microsoft Is this the Altair Basic of?February 2015 · 377 words
  69. What Doesn't Seem Like Work?January 2015 · 488 words
  70. The Ronco PrincipleJanuary 2015 · 630 words
  71. Don't Talk to Corp DevJanuary 2015 · 1,292 words
  72. The Fatal PinchDecember 2014 · 1,602 words
  73. How You KnowDecember 2014 · 648 words
  74. How to Be an Expert in a Changing WorldDecember 2014 · 1,061 words
  75. Let the Other 95% of Great Programmers InDecember 2014 · 924 words
  76. Mean People FailNovember 2014 · 1,138 words
  77. Before the StartupOctober 2014 · 4,593 words
  78. How to Raise MoneySeptember 2013 · 10,671 words
  79. Investor Herd DynamicsAugust 2013 · 1,096 words
  80. How to Convince InvestorsAugust 2013 · 3,682 words
  81. Do Things that Don't ScaleJuly 2013 · 4,345 words
  82. Startup Investing TrendsJune 2013 · 2,955 words
  83. How to Get Startup IdeasNovember 2012 · 7,208 words
  84. The Hardware RenaissanceOctober 2012 · 400 words
  85. Black Swan FarmingSeptember 2012 · 2,148 words
  86. Startup = GrowthSeptember 2012 · 5,345 words
  87. The Top of My Todo ListApril 2012 · 234 words
  88. How Y Combinator StartedMarch 2012 · 1,447 words
  89. Writing and SpeakingMarch 2012 · 1,194 words
  90. Defining PropertyMarch 2012 · 980 words
  91. Frighteningly Ambitious Startup IdeasMarch 2012 · 3,779 words
  92. A Word to the ResourcefulJanuary 2012 · 789 words
  93. Snapshot: Viaweb, June 1998January 2012 · 869 words
  94. Schlep BlindnessJanuary 2012 · 840 words
  95. Why Startup Hubs WorkOctober 2011 · 1,796 words
  96. The Patent PledgeAugust 2011 · 685 words
  97. Subject: AirbnbMarch 2011 · 1,370 words
  98. TabletsDecember 2010 · 549 words
  99. Founder ControlDecember 2010 · 769 words
  100. The New Funding LandscapeOctober 2010 · 3,572 words
  101. Where to See Silicon ValleyOctober 2010 · 1,071 words
  102. What We Look for in FoundersOctober 2010 · 787 words
  103. High Resolution FundraisingSeptember 2010 · 702 words
  104. What Happened to YahooAugust 2010 · 2,039 words
  105. The Future of Startup FundingAugust 2010 · 3,867 words
  106. The Top Idea in Your MindJuly 2010 · 1,158 words
  107. How to Lose Time and MoneyJuly 2010 · 678 words
  108. The Acceleration of AddictivenessJuly 2010 · 1,273 words
  109. Organic Startup IdeasApril 2010 · 994 words
  110. Apple's MistakeNovember 2009 · 2,134 words
  111. What Startups Are Really LikeOctober 2009 · 5,129 words
  112. Post-Medium PublishingSeptember 2009 · 1,772 words
  113. The List of N ThingsSeptember 2009 · 1,446 words
  114. Persuade xor DiscoverSeptember 2009 · 1,301 words
  115. The Anatomy of DeterminationSeptember 2009 · 1,489 words
  116. What Kate Saw in Silicon ValleyAugust 2009 · 813 words
  117. The Trouble with the SegwayJuly 2009 · 379 words
  118. Ramen ProfitableJuly 2009 · 1,833 words
  119. Maker's Schedule, Manager's ScheduleJuly 2009 · 1,157 words
  120. Why Twitter is a Big DealApril 2009 · 147 words
  121. A Local Revolution?April 2009 · 1,339 words
  122. The Founder VisaApril 2009 · 404 words
  123. Five FoundersApril 2009 · 757 words
  124. Relentlessly ResourcefulMarch 2009 · 995 words
  125. Why TV LostMarch 2009 · 1,529 words
  126. How to Be an Angel InvestorMarch 2009 · 3,953 words
  127. Can You Buy a Silicon Valley? Maybe.February 2009 · 1,912 words
  128. Keep Your Identity SmallFebruary 2009 · 867 words
  129. What I've Learned from Hacker NewsFebruary 2009 · 2,864 words
  130. Startups in 13 SentencesFebruary 2009 · 1,312 words
  131. The High-Res SocietyDecember 2008 · 1,522 words
  132. Could VC be a Casualty of the Recession?December 2008 · 1,349 words
  133. After CredentialsDecember 2008 · 2,385 words
  134. The Other Half of \"Artists Ship\"November 2008 · 1,309 words
  135. Why to Start a Startup in a Bad EconomyOctober 2008 · 1,098 words
  136. A Fundraising Survival GuideAugust 2008 · 4,825 words
  137. The Pooled-Risk Company Management CompanyJuly 2008 · 1,260 words
  138. Lies We Tell KidsMay 2008 · 5,249 words
  139. Disconnecting DistractionMay 2008 · 1,151 words
  140. Cities and AmbitionMay 2008 · 3,604 words
  141. Some HeroesApril 2008 · 2,695 words
  142. Why There Aren't More GooglesApril 2008 · 1,328 words
  143. Be GoodApril 2008 · 2,948 words
  144. A New Venture AnimalMarch 2008, rev May 2013 · 1,987 words
  145. How to DisagreeMarch 2008 · 1,518 words
  146. You Weren't Meant to Have a BossMarch 2008, rev. June 2008 · 2,521 words
  147. TrollsFebruary 2008 · 893 words
  148. Six Principles for Making New ThingsFebruary 2008 · 1,167 words
  149. The Future of Web StartupsOctober 2007 · 3,394 words
  150. Why to Move to a Startup HubOctober 2007 · 1,458 words
  151. How to Do PhilosophySeptember 2007 · 4,721 words
  152. News from the FrontSeptember 2007 · 2,216 words
  153. Holding a Program in One's HeadAugust 2007 · 1,842 words
  154. How Not to DieAugust 2007 · 1,963 words
  155. StuffJuly 2007 · 1,246 words
  156. The Equity EquationJuly 2007 · 1,132 words
  157. An Alternative Theory of UnionsMay 2007 · 515 words
  158. Microsoft is DeadApril 2007 · 1,288 words
  159. Two Kinds of JudgementApril 2007 · 740 words
  160. The Hacker's Guide to InvestorsApril 2007 · 6,246 words
  161. Why to Not Not Start a StartupMarch 2007 · 6,274 words
  162. Is It Worth Being Wise?February 2007 · 3,743 words
  163. Learning from FoundersJanuary 2007 · 832 words
  164. How Art Can Be GoodDecember 2006 · 3,624 words
  165. The 18 Mistakes That Kill StartupsOctober 2006 · 5,593 words
  166. A Student's Guide to StartupsOctober 2006 · 6,446 words
  167. How to Present to InvestorsAugust 2006, rev. April 2007, September 2010 · 2,829 words
  168. The Island TestJuly 2006 · 755 words
  169. Copy What You LikeJuly 2006 · 931 words
  170. The Power of the MarginalJune 2006 · 6,052 words
  171. How to Be Silicon ValleyMay 2006 · 3,623 words
  172. Why Startups Condense in AmericaMay 2006 · 4,764 words
  173. The Hardest Lessons for Startups to LearnApril 2006 · 4,827 words
  174. See RandomnessApril 2006, rev August 2009 · 593 words
  175. Why YCMarch 2006, rev August 2009 · 376 words
  176. Are Software Patents Evil?March 2006 · 4,658 words
  177. 6,631,372March 2006, rev August 2009 · 693 words
  178. How to Do What You LoveJanuary 2006 · 4,680 words
  179. Good and Bad ProcrastinationDecember 2005 · 1,805 words
  180. Web 2.0November 2005 · 3,364 words
  181. The Venture Capital SqueezeNovember 2005 · 1,564 words
  182. How to Fund a StartupNovember 2005 · 8,921 words
  183. What I Did this SummerOctober 2005 · 2,574 words
  184. Ideas for StartupsOctober 2005 · 3,934 words
  185. What Business Can Learn from Open SourceAugust 2005 · 4,353 words
  186. After the LadderAugust 2005 · 585 words
  187. Inequality and RiskAugust 2005 · 2,819 words
  188. Hiring is ObsoleteMay 2005 · 4,777 words
  189. The SubmarineApril 2005 · 2,369 words
  190. Why Smart People Have Bad IdeasApril 2005 · 3,159 words
  191. Writing, BrieflyMarch 2005 · 459 words
  192. A Unified Theory of VC SuckageMarch 2005 · 1,472 words
  193. How to Start a StartupMarch 2005 · 9,742 words
  194. Return of the MacMarch 2005 · 1,004 words
  195. UndergraduationMarch 2005 · 3,669 words
  196. What You'll Wish You'd KnownJanuary 2005 · 5,074 words
  197. Made in USANovember 2004 · 1,852 words
  198. Bradley's GhostNovember 2004 · 623 words
  199. It's Charisma, StupidNovember 2004, corrected June 2006 · 1,505 words
  200. A Version 1.0October 2004 · 4,266 words
  201. The Age of the EssaySeptember 2004 · 4,523 words
  202. What the Bubble Got RightSeptember 2004 · 3,732 words
  203. The Python ParadoxAugust 2004 · 449 words
  204. Great HackersJuly 2004 · 5,224 words
  205. How to Make WealthMay 2004 · 8,938 words
  206. Mind the GapMay 2004 · 5,684 words
  207. The Word \"Hacker\"April 2004 · 1,937 words
  208. What You Can't SayJanuary 2004 · 5,455 words
  209. Filters that Fight BackAugust 2003 · 831 words
  210. If Lisp is So GreatMay 2003 · 418 words
  211. Hackers and PaintersMay 2003 · 5,599 words
  212. The Hundred-Year LanguageApril 2003 · 4,791 words
  213. Why Nerds are UnpopularFebruary 2003 · 5,707 words
  214. Design and ResearchJanuary 2003 · 2,664 words
  215. Better Bayesian FilteringJanuary 2003 · 4,346 words
  216. A Plan for SpamAugust 2002 · 5,342 words
  217. Succinctness is PowerMay 2002 · 3,032 words
  218. Revenge of the NerdsMay 2002 · 5,830 words
  219. Taste for MakersFebruary 2002 · 4,324 words
  220. What Made Lisp DifferentDecember 2001 (rev. May 2002) · 706 words
  221. The Other Road AheadSeptember 2001 · 11,971 words
  222. The Roots of LispMay 2001 · 367 words
  223. Being PopularMay 2001 · 7,605 words
  224. Five Questions about Language DesignMay 2001 · 2,946 words
  225. Java's CoverApril 2001 · 1,380 words
  226. Beating the AveragesApril 2001, rev. April 2003 · 4,462 words
  227. Programming Bottom-Up1993 · 926 words
  228. Why Arc Isn't Especially Object-Oriented494 words
  229. Lisp for Web-Based Applications58 words
  230. What Languages Fix213 words