A community registry for AI tools. Discover who's working on similar problems. Keep the incentives that make building worthwhile.
In 1997, Garry Kasparov lost to Deep Blue. His response wasn't to stop playing chess. It was to invent a new kind — advanced chess, where human and machine play together.
The team that won wasn't the best human or the best machine. It was the best partnership. We call that a centaur.
The AI tools moment feels like that. Builders everywhere. Discoveries daily. The energy is real and the work is extraordinary. But spend time in the channels where this work happens and you'll notice something: the room is full and somehow also empty.
Everyone broadcasts. Nobody accumulates. Two nearly equivalent tools appear in consecutive messages and nobody asks: how do these differ? What does one do that the other doesn't? Wouldn't it be something if someone built the version that had both?
The signal that could become knowledge never quite gets there — because there's nowhere for it to happen. This is that place.
Every tool carries its lineage. Related projects link to each other. When work overlaps, both builders know.
Submit a tool, meet your neighbors. The registry matches on the problem you're solving and introduces you to others working in the same space.
MIT license. Everything on centaur.tools is forkable, stealable, buildable-upon. The only social contract is: cite your parents.
centaur.tools is where they meet.