Cogitator can write its own skills based on what it learns. If you keep asking it to format data a certain way, it turns that into a reusable skill. There's also a community marketplace where you can browse and install skills others have built.
Every AI starts from zero on specialized tasks. You explain the same process, the same formatting, the same steps every time. There's no way for the agent to package what it learned and reuse it later.
Describe what you need, and ask the agent to build a skill. It writes the instructions, tests them, and saves the result. Next time you need it, the skill is already there.
When the agent notices you're asking for the same thing in a similar way, it proposes turning that into a skill. A skill is a saved set of instructions the agent can reuse. You approve it, tweak it if you want, and it's ready for next time.
Browse and install third-party skills from ClawHub. Each skill comes with a description and rating, so you know what you're getting before you add it. One click to install.
An installed skill has access to memory, tools, connectors, and scheduled tasks. It's not a template. It's a capability. A skill can look things up, call external services, and remember what it did last time.
The agent proposes skills based on patterns it sees. After a few similar requests, it asks whether you'd like to save those instructions as a skill you can trigger by name.
Browse and install community skills from the dashboard. Each listing shows what the skill does, how many people use it, and how they rated it.
Read, update, or remove any installed skill. If a community skill doesn't quite fit, you can modify it to match your needs.
Skills use the same tools and memory as a regular conversation. They can read from your knowledge graph, call connected services, and schedule follow-up tasks.