17 comments

  • cadamsdotcom 2 hours ago
    Claude and Codex can have real time conversation via a git repo, or via a file, via a Unix socket, via the terminal, via a human, via two humans shouting back and forth over a comically high office partition, or entirely by setting up chess board states only reachable after both sides have castled.
    • hun3 2 hours ago
      If you squint hard enough, you'll notice your bank account serves as an IPC semaphore replenishing API credit balances.

      Your wallet is now a real-time communication channel.

      • spockz 1 hour ago
        There was the commercial of a bank using mobile banking as a chat system by sending 1ct back and forth and using the description.
        • mystifyingpoi 14 minutes ago
          I recall some friends did that in colleage. Obviously with a bit of teenage humor in money transfer descriptions... which is not really funny, since there is no way to remove the transaction ever. Good times.
    • dominotw 1 hour ago
      or via humans communicating via slack. happeneing all over workplaces.
  • xg15 1 hour ago
    I'll be impressed if a Claude and a Codex instance improvise a channel like this spontaneously on their own.

    Doing this intentionally via prompt doesn't seem very interesting.

    • rhgraysonii 18 minutes ago
      I regularly have agents communicate with each other this way using my tools Deciduous (https://deciduous.dev). It keeps all decisions in a DAG and the other agents, when configured, read from it constantly and use it to inform their new decisions. Extra entries in the same space from another agent come to light and they can begin to work together like this.
    • avaer 56 minutes ago
      An agent that reads this article, or is trained on it, will know about the technique even if it didn't before.

      When that happens, will it still be impressive/spontaneous? Will we know the difference?

      • xg15 26 minutes ago
        Not as much as if they improvised it from scratch - but the decision when to use the technique and the discovery and coordination with the other agent would still be interesting.
      • gtrealejandro 20 minutes ago
        [dead]
  • iandanforth 2 hours ago
    Claude can directly drive Codex or Codex can drive Claude. Both already produce logs. It's unclear what value this intermediary brings.
    • jeswin 1 hour ago
      Agree that the intermediary is not very useful when you can just use a directory watcher, but driving Claude via another app incurs api level costs starting this month, according to the new ToS.
    • burgerone 1 hour ago
      It's also unclear what conversing agents are useful for other than wasting money, energy and water.
      • mexicocitinluez 1 hour ago
        It's hard enough to get the same model to be consistent around it's vision let alone multiple of them.

        I'm building an EMR and the other day asked Claude what a decent model would look like for capturing wound orders. Then, I took the output, started a new session and asked the new session to critique that model and the response made me want to pull my hair out. It blasted the model from it's former self and suggested making a ton of updates.

        I'm sure more scoped tasks would fair better, but it was pretty frustrating.

      • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
        If I don't see the point of Elixir, or I don't like it, or I simply straight up hate it, why would I go into HN submissions about new Elixir versions and spew my personal opinion that has nothing to do with the topic at hand?

        You can just skip commenting unless you have something actually useful to add. Even if it's criticism of the specific thing, but at the very least make it on topic instead of general digressions that just add noise to the conversation.

    • rurban 2 hours ago
      [dead]
  • rigonkulous 1 hour ago
    I have started sandboxing all AI's in their own VM, and interfacing with them primarily through Jira and Git.

    It really is the only thing that makes sense. Completely sandbox'ed, and treated like the junior programmer who will do, literally, any dumb thing you tell them to do, as long as there is an Issue for it.

    • resonious 35 minutes ago
      I do a similar thing where the agent runs in a Docker container and I talk to it with Telegram. It has GitHub CLI access but only with a very restricted PAT. No bind mounts. Jira is pretty clever, though I'm not feeling enough pain with just Telegram to want to try switching at this point.
    • BrokenCogs 28 minutes ago
      How do you sandbox an agent? Docker?
  • Game_Ender 2 hours ago
    Related is Beads [0] which is an external memory and task based issue tracker. Also designed to allow agents to collaborate. I have not actually used Beads but since we are share basics in this space it's a cool one to know if you are looking at ways for agents to collaborate on more complex problems.

    0 - https://github.com/gastownhall/beads

  • ryanthedev 46 minutes ago
    You can also do this cross computer. It’s how I debug problems.

    I actually built a memory system off git. https://github.com/ryanthedev/grug-brain.mcp

  • joshka 42 minutes ago
    This might be more suitable as a basis for this sort of thing... https://git-meta.com/
  • frb 1 hour ago
    In my recent quest to build agent-as-primary-user tools I've built grpvn (https://github.com/frane/grpvn), a small Go/SQLite application that lets skill- and mcp-capable agents talk to each other. Biggest issue is the lack of a hook system so the agents can autonomously read and respond. Waiting for this to be supported, as IMO multi-agent teams talking to each other are an interesting next step.
  • mchinen 1 hour ago
    I have agents chat via an append only file, across related projects and within the same project. They share findings that are useful and get high level reviews.

    I'm missing the advantage of using git for this. (Not criticism, genuinely want to know).

    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
      Yup, doing the same too, newline-deliminated jsonl files works great too, across any agent/model, on any OS. For some cross-OS development stuff, I have a local NFS share too, and works when I'm doing testing on macOS + Windows at the same time. Just need to put something like this in the prompt (simplified) "Read any updates to $FILE before doing your own changes, add new row with a concise description of what you're doing into $FILE before doing it, add new row to $FILE once you're done".
  • Floppyrom 7 minutes ago
    what could possibly go wrong?
  • KingOfCoders 1 hour ago
    I let them talk via tmux, two panes, each has an agent and agents know how to send text via tmux to panes.
  • FlippieFinance 3 days ago
    This is actually so great. I mainly use Claude Code but sometimes I am sending over a message to Codex asking what he thinks of the idea of Claude Code. This can save so much time :D
    • fjwood69 3 days ago
      So I solved this by using NATS and letting each agent pub / sub to the shared message bus.. simple binary you can run anywhere and it's highly useful! Part of a broader tool I created - https://github.com/fjwood69/mori
      • dizhn 45 minutes ago
        I am not very well versed in these kind of tools. How does it compare with something like Hindsight MCP?

        How do you make the agents actually use the tool? That has been my main problem with most mcp and tools. The agents know about them but don't use them unless reminded to.

      • FlippieFinance 3 days ago
        thanks for sharing dude. How long did this take you?
        • fjwood69 3 days ago
          about six weeks.. Pushed a v1.0 product with a huge list of v2.x enhancements and features inbound.

          to your point about asking Codex.. that's my /consult feature. spin out the current context in any number of ways to ask for advice.. on a plan, on a specific architectural decision, on a security basis.. I use it all the time as a check on everything Claude Code proposes.

          any / all feedback most welcome.

          fw

    • rcarmo 2 hours ago
      I added a chat tool to https://github.com/rcarmo/piclaw, so any active session can chat to each other, regardless of what model they run. It's led to interesting outcomes: https://x.com/rcarmo/status/2054185558402904338?s=20
    • mexicocitinluez 1 hour ago
      Does it not turn into a never-ending snowball? Do they eventually agree on something?
  • mirekrusin 1 hour ago
    Won't appending to .jsonl keep creating conflicts?
  • stuaxo 2 hours ago
    This is interesting, it would be good to show an session.
  • mettamage 2 hours ago
    > Claude Code and Codex to collaborate as if they were having a real-time conversation

    How is this new? I vibe coded something in a similar vein months ago. In my case they send markdown files to each other and have a watcher that watches the folders of all the other agents.

    If this type of stuff is frontpage news, let me share what I cobbled together.

      ls ~/.agent/projects/<my_project>/callgraph
    
      callgraph.current.md         callgraph.last.read.agent.md
      callgraph.diff.md
    
    The current callgraph is a callgraph only of my own defined functions that agents can read. It shows certain software design issues fairly quickly. callgraph.diff.md is to send the diff through. I have a vibecoded script that agents can use to create the callgraph. It works for my projects.

      ls ~/.agent/projects/<my_project>/memo
      architect   coder  retro     tester
    
    retro is not a role, it's just a handover folder. The other 3 are roles that agents can use and then they need to make a folder with their name. For example:

      ls ~/.agent/projects/<my_project>/memo/architect
      1_Daedalus     3_Brunelleschi 5_Wren         7_Sinan
      2_Vitruvius    4_Imhotep      6_Hadid        8_Palladio
    
      ls ~/.agent/projects/<my_project>/memo/architect/7_Sinan
      20260507___1802_to_Hadid.md    20260507___2035_to_Quench.md
      20260507___1959_to_Crucible.md 20260511___1401_to_Quench.md
      20260507___2008_to_Quench.md   20260511___1403_to_Quench.md
      20260507___2030_to_Quench.md   read.md
    
    read.md is the index that an agent keeps track of so it knows what it doesn't need to read. The .md files are memo's that it sends to other agents. The other agents are being told to see if an agent writes anything in its own folder (so they check all the folders except their own) and are able to detect to see if they need to read something.

      ls ~/.agent/projects/<my_project>/memo/coder
      10_Mallet   12_Crucible 14_Swage    2_Forge     4_Anvil     6_Tongs     8_Chisel
      11_Auger    13_Quench   1_Atlas     3_Rivet     5_Bellows   7_Hammer    9_Vise
    
    As you can see, Sinan sent most of its message to Quench, a coder.

    This is because architects read a very comprehensive guide on software design/architecture and get to use the callgraph utility but cannot see the code. Coders read the codebase in full but only read a small markdown file on how to write readable code. And of course, every agent that is set up this way have to read a markdown file on how to use the memo system.

    If I'd need a memo system like this for like 25 agents, I'd need something different but up until 5 agent with me looking at 5 terminal windows worked well enough.

  • aos_architect 48 minutes ago
    [flagged]
  • technerd1231 2 hours ago
    [dead]