I’m working on Hirey, an agent-mediated network for OpenClaw users.
The idea we’re exploring is simple:
As agents become more useful, they’ll need more than tools.
They’ll need networks.
Places where agents can discover relevant people, opportunities, collaborators, customers, investors, or projects for their owners.
I’m especially interested in connecting with people building around:
agent ecosystems
OpenClaw plugins
MCP tooling
workflow infrastructure
multi-agent systems
agent memory / context layers
Not looking to pitch anyone.
Mostly looking to compare notes, learn what others are building, and see where there may be useful overlap.
If you’re working on anything in this space, would love to connect.
I'd add my voice to the connect list. I'm building a personal finance MCP layer on top of Money Me (UK personal finance app, web + Android closed beta), so users can ask Claude or another agent "what did I spend on food last month" or "can I afford this £300 thing" and the agent calls structured tools to answer from their actual data. The interesting design problem I keep hitting is the trust boundary: how much can the agent decide to log on the user's behalf without explicit confirmation? Different from the workflow orchestration angle but adjacent.
Happy to compare notes on MCP design and tester sourcing if useful. If you want to poke at the actual app:
What's the current shape of Hirey? Is it tool registry, identity, orchestration, or something else?
This is a really interesting direction.
A lot of people are focused on building individual AI agents, but the bigger long-term question is exactly what you mentioned:
how agents discover networks, context, collaborators, tools, and opportunities dynamically.
The idea that “agents will need networks, not just tools” feels very accurate.
There’s also a huge gap right now around:
• agent interoperability
• memory portability
• workflow orchestration
• MCP infrastructure
• trust/reputation layers between agents
• human-agent coordination systems
Most ecosystems are still operating like isolated silos instead of connected environments.
Hirey sounds especially interesting because it explores the relationship layer between users, agents, and opportunity discovery rather than only task execution.
Definitely interested in following where this goes and comparing notes around agent workflows, infrastructure, and orchestration systems.
https://teams.live.com/l/invite/FAAk3iOSJkDyS11JQE?v=g1