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Found 175 Skills
Design and implement workflow automation with task routing approval chains and SLA monitoring for securities operations. Use when building a new operational workflow for account opening maintenance transfers or corporate actions, implementing task routing logic based on type priority or capacity, designing multi-level approval chains with dollar thresholds and delegation of authority, defining escalation rules for aging work items approaching SLA breach, selecting a workflow engine or BPM platform like Camunda Pega or ServiceNow, modeling an operational process as a state machine with defined transitions, adding audit trail and logging for SEC Rule 17a-3 or FINRA supervisory obligations, migrating from email-and-spreadsheet tracking to a structured workflow system, or measuring cycle time throughput queue depth and rework rate.
Use when the user asks for a broad codebase review, substantial PR/branch review, architecture audit, tech-debt scan, cleanup assessment, structural sanity check, or design-alignment review. Default workflow: use sub-agents when available unless specifically forbidden; do not require the user to mention sub-agents, council mode, delegation, or parallel review. Focus on cruft, duplication, weak boundaries, missed reuse, lifecycle/concurrency risks, test/roadmap drift, and code aesthetics. Do not use for narrow bug fixes, ordinary small-diff reviews, frontend visual QA, repo-onboarding docs, or OpenAI Agents SDK production-readiness review. Output evidence-backed findings first, then pressure points, design alignment, open questions, and follow-through.
Provides domain knowledge and guidance for the Flare Time Series Oracle (FTSO)—block-latency feeds, Scaling anchor feeds, feed IDs, onchain and offchain consumption, fee calculation, delegation, and smart contract integration. Use when working with FTSO, price feeds, oracle data, feed consumption, volatility incentives, or Flare Developer Hub FTSO guides and starter repos.
Decentralized git for AI agents and humans. Use when the user wants to create repositories, push code, open pull requests, review and merge PRs, manage issues, create or claim bounties, delegate tasks to other agents, register human-readable names on Base L2, or interact with the gitlawb decentralized git network. Supports cryptographic DID identities, Ed25519-signed pushes, UCAN capability delegation, libp2p networking, and 31+ MCP tools for AI agent integration. Do NOT use for GitHub, GitLab, or other centralized git hosts.
Provides Qwen Coder CLI delegation workflows for coding tasks using Qwen2.5-Coder and QwQ models, including English prompt formulation, execution flags, and safe result handling. Use when the user explicitly asks to use Qwen for tasks such as code generation, refactoring, debugging, or architectural analysis. Triggers on "use qwen", "use qwen coder", "delegate to qwen", "ask qwen", "second opinion from qwen", "qwen opinion", "continue with qwen", "qwen session".
Internal downstream skill for ctf-sandbox-orchestrator. CTF-sandbox workflow for Kerberos, WinRM, SMB, RDP, Windows credential material, replayable tickets, delegation edges, and host-to-host pivot chains. Use when the user asks to replay Kerberos material, trace a WinRM, SMB, or RDP pivot, understand host-to-host privilege movement, or prove which Windows service accepted a credential or ticket. Use only after `$ctf-sandbox-orchestrator` has already established sandbox assumptions and routed here.
Manage for output using Grove's "High Output Management": a manager's output is their organization's output, raised by high-leverage activities. Use when the user mentions "high output management", "managerial leverage", "one-on-ones", "1:1 agenda", "OKRs", "performance review", "task-relevant maturity", "delegation", "meeting overload", "new manager", "how do I run a 1:1", or "just got promoted to manager". Also trigger when structuring a manager's calendar and meeting cadence, designing team metrics, running planning, coaching delegation, or preparing performance reviews. Covers leverage, production principles, meetings as the medium of management, decisions, OKRs, and task-relevant maturity. For intrinsic motivation, see drive-motivation. For a company operating system, see traction-eos.
ROOT ORCHESTRATOR ONLY. Explicit-use token-aware Codex workflow with leaf workers, DAG gating, state ledger, retry policy, and no nested delegation.
Decision guide for delegating to caveman-style subagents. Tells the main thread WHEN to spawn `cavecrew-investigator` (locate code), `cavecrew-builder` (1-2 file edit), or `cavecrew-reviewer` (diff review) instead of doing the work inline or using vanilla `Explore`. Subagent output is caveman-compressed so the tool-result injected back into main context is ~60% smaller — main context lasts longer across long sessions. Trigger: "delegate to subagent", "use cavecrew", "spawn investigator/builder/reviewer", "save context", "compressed agent output".
Creates Cursor-specific AI subagents with isolated context for complex multi-step workflows. Use when creating subagents for Cursor editor specifically, following Cursor's patterns and directories (.cursor/agents/). Triggers on "cursor subagent", "cursor agent".
Use when working with *.excalidraw or *.excalidraw.json files, user mentions diagrams/flowcharts, or requests architecture visualization - delegates all Excalidraw operations to subagents to prevent context exhaustion from verbose JSON (single files: 4k-22k tokens, can exceed read limits)
Coordinates project documentation creation. Gathers context once, detects project type, delegates to 5 L3 workers (ln-111-115). L2 Coordinator invoked by ln-100.