We wanted something short and easy to remember
With bigger autonomy, I'd like my skill be tight to my release in prod/commit sha for dev, to figure out what version caused harm/bug. What is the motivation to decouple and make it a separate thing?
My main argument is that just using vanilla git where you store it in the directory that the AI coding agent expects means that you can't share across teams or orgs.
Also, not every kind of team is comfortable with git. How would you distribute these assets to a Marketing team?
The short version: sx treats skills, MCP server configs, slash commands, agents, hooks, and rule files as versioned packages. You define them once, push them to a vault (a local folder, a git repo, or our hosted backend), and install them where they belong. There's a lockfile so installs are reproducible, scope levels for org / team / repo / individual, and the CLI translates the same asset into the format each AI client expects.
Supported clients today: Claude Code, Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Cline, Codex, Gemini (CLI / VS Code / JetBrains / Android Studio), Kiro, claude.ai, chatgpt.com. The last two are what let non-engineering teams (marketing, legal, ops) use the same primitive instead of being locked out of the AI-assets ecosystem.
The thing I'd most like feedback on is whether the scope model is the right shape. Org → team → repo → path → individual is what's emerged from talking to ~60 teams over the last six months, but I expect bigger orgs will surface scopes we haven't modeled (sub-team, environment, etc.).
Why this and not just plugins / vendor marketplaces? Claude Code plugins are real and a good step up over raw git-checked-in CLAUDE.md files. The limitations show up at scale: each plugin is scoped to its publishing repo, so teams duplicate skills across plugins, and you're still locked to a single vendor's client. Full writeup with the technical details: https://www.sleuth.io/post/there-s-an-npm-shaped-hole-in-the...
So, it is true that some skills are independent, but not all. IN my company, we ship assets by domain and workflows (development, discovery, data science, etc)
Very interesting about the domain and workflows. Do you think domain could map to a team or is it different?
At your company how are you shipping your assets? How do you do the domain and workflow grouping?
The tool support is certainly one of the key pillars of the project so we're open to any tool additions that will help people get value from the project.
Tools that come to mind:
RTK (Rust Token Killer since googling the acronym yields terrible results, asking an LLM without spelling it out too)
Beads (what GuardRails was inspired by)
... and an endless list of tools people have made in place of making an MCP.
I too thought about having a "AI Package manager" just found the message I sent a friend several months back.