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Found 4,745 Skills
Analyze YouTube channels for outlier videos and packaging patterns. Identifies what's working (2x+ average views) across any set of channels. Use when asked for YouTube competitive analysis, viral video patterns, or packaging/title inspiration.
C++ library for reducing tail latency in RAM reads by hedging across multiple DRAM channels with uncorrelated refresh schedules
Build a pre-implementation harness for ambiguous or risky coding tasks by grounding the request in the repository, producing a structured impact map, surfacing ambiguities and risks, defining scope boundaries, and creating a validation-ready implementation contract before any code changes are made. Use when a task is broad, underspecified, cross-cutting, or likely to drift without an explicit planning checkpoint.
Read-only: finds duplicate SKUs or barcodes across all product variants.
Enforce consistent tagging across the Obsidian wiki using a controlled vocabulary. Use this skill when the user says "fix my tags", "normalize tags", "clean up tags", "tag audit", "what tags should I use", "tag taxonomy", or whenever you're creating or updating wiki pages and need to choose the right tags. Also trigger when the user asks about tag conventions, wants to add a new tag to the taxonomy, or says "my tags are a mess". Always consult this skill's taxonomy file before assigning tags to any wiki page.
Maintains persistent codebase knowledge across sessions through a structured knowledge graph stored in a local Obsidian vault (.doctrack/). Use this skill whenever you have just made meaningful code changes (new features, modified components, refactoring, bug fixes) to update the project's documentation. Also use it when the user asks to document code, update docs, sync documentation, initialize documentation for an existing project, or when you want to understand the existing codebase structure at the start of a session. This skill should be used proactively after any significant code modification — don't wait for the user to ask. If you changed code, update the docs. Think of it as your long-term memory system: read before working, write after changing. Also use this when a user says "doctrack init", "doctrack refresh", "refresh docs", "update docs", "sync docs", "initialize docs", "document this project", or wants to bootstrap documentation for a codebase that has no .doctrack/ vault yet.
Progressive Domain Crystallization (PDC) — a skill for building and maintaining a living domain knowledge base for any custom business application. Use this skill whenever the user is developing a business application and wants the AI to accumulate understanding of internal terminology, entities, relationships, and business rules over time — especially when that knowledge is not fully defined upfront and grows across sessions. Trigger on any of: "remember how our system works", "learn our domain", "track business entities", "build domain knowledge", "understand our terminology", "grow AI context over time", "domain model", "business rules documentation", or whenever a user says the AI doesn't understand their business-specific language or data model. Also use at the start of any session where a DOMAIN.md file exists in the project — always read it before doing any work.
Clinic-architecture-aligned iOS animation craft guidelines for SwiftUI (iOS 26 / Swift 6.2) covering motion tokens, spring physics, gesture continuity, spatial transitions, micro-interactions, and accessibility. Enforces @Equatable on animated views and keeps animation state aligned with Domain/Data feature boundaries. Use when writing, reviewing, or refactoring SwiftUI animation code under the clinic modular MVVM-C architecture.
The Twelve-Factor App methodology for building scalable, maintainable cloud-native applications. Use when designing backend services, APIs, microservices, or any software-as-a-service application. Triggers on deployment patterns, configuration management, process architecture, logging, and infrastructure decisions.
Diagnoses and fixes UI performance across loading speed, rendering, animations, images, and bundle size. Use when the user mentions slow, laggy, janky, performance, bundle size, load time, or wants a faster, smoother experience.
Guides implementation of agent memory systems, compares production frameworks (Mem0, Zep/Graphiti, Letta, LangMem, Cognee), and designs persistence architectures for cross-session knowledge retention. Use when the user asks to "implement agent memory", "persist state across sessions", "build knowledge graph for agents", "track entities over time", "add long-term memory", "choose a memory framework", or mentions temporal knowledge graphs, vector stores, entity memory, adaptive memory, dynamic memory, or memory benchmarks (LoCoMo, LongMemEval). A core context engineering skill — also activates when the user mentions "context engineering" or "context-engineering" in the context of durable agent knowledge and cross-session persistence.
Apply BCG Growth-Share Matrix to analyze a product or business unit portfolio for resource allocation decisions. Use this skill when the user needs to prioritize investments across multiple products, decide which products to grow vs harvest vs divest, or evaluate a portfolio's balance — even if they say 'which products should we invest in' or 'portfolio strategy' without naming BCG.