Agent MGMT guide to agent orchestrators
Useful list, but another directory in a sea of AI tool trackers.

This is the kind of curated index I wish existed yesterday: agent pages, config format examples, SDK links and two named protocols (MCP/ACP) all collected in one place, plus a weekly-ranked table of models with context-length notes. It feels like real curation rather than linkspam, but the site leans on lists and scores — show the benchmark methodology, reproducible tests or interactive demos and the rankings would become trustable rather than just convenient.
Software developers, ML/AI engineers, tool builders and teams evaluating or building coding agents
Useful list, but another directory in a sea of AI tool trackers.
Big, filterable index with clear category pills, a prominent search box and daily-updated counts — handy for quickly scanning the agent ecosystem. Feels like a thoughtful curation (MCP servers, memory, platforms called out) but it stops short of being decisive: there are few trust signals, no standardized metadata (pricing, license, maturity) and no side-by-side comparisons, so it’s a great starting point rather than the final answer when choosing tooling.
Yet another AI app directory when Product Hunt and existing platforms already do this.
Human curation beats algorithms, but manual updates limit scale compared to Feedly.
A focused, curated index of ~150 apps that actually claims to review for "genuine voice-native interaction," which is a useful filter in a niche cluttered with slap-on voice features. The landing page gives clear categories, featured picks and a submit flow, but it stops short of being indispensable — no audio demos, interaction recordings, or community ratings to judge how well the voice UX actually works.
Curated AI video directory, but exposed database credentials in page source.