Stop Juggling Six AI Tabs — Hermes Just Made Them One System
Jack Roberts walks through an agentic OS that unifies Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, and Hermes into a single layer that 'dreams' about your business overnight and surfaces a morning brief.
Most people running AI in their business right now have a context-isolation problem they don't even see. Claude open in one window. ChatGPT in another. Gemini for search. Grok for X. Cursor for code. Five tools, five sets of memory, zero of them talking to each other — and you're the integration layer.
Jack Roberts' new walkthrough on the Hermes Agentic OS reframes that mess. The pitch isn't another tool. It's one operating layer on top of all of them.
What the "agentic OS" actually unlocks
Two things change the moment your stack is unified:
1. Context stops leaking. Hermes (and the Claude Agentic OS path next to it) gets full access to your conversations across every model you use. Skills you lean on. Skills you keep ignoring. Patterns in how you ask questions. That's the raw material for actual personalization — not the fake "remembers your name" kind.
2. The system can run overnight. Jack's favorite use case is what he calls dreaming — letting the agent re-read your week, look for surface patterns, weak spots in conversations, skills that stuck vs. ones that didn't, and generate a morning brief with two or three concrete suggestions. No prompt required. It just shows up.
That's the part most "AI productivity" tools miss. They wait for you to ask. An agentic OS works while you sleep.
Why this is the next move, not a nice-to-have
Here's the unlock: every skill, every persona, every cost line in one view. You see by the hour how much you're spending across which model and on what. You can swap models mid-task to cut spend without losing context. And you can build skills once and call them from anywhere.
If you've ever opened Claude, copied a prompt out, pasted it into ChatGPT for a second opinion, then re-pasted both into a Google doc to compare — you've felt the gap this is closing.
What to do this week
You don't need to buy anything. You need to pick one workflow you do daily — content, research, lead follow-up — and write down every tool it touches. That's your unification map. Then ask: where would a single "morning brief" agent save the most pain?
Start there. Build small. The compound win on this is going to be enormous over the next six months — and the people who get the OS layer right first are going to be light-years ahead by Q1.