staticpayload
I'm 16, in 12th. Most of my time goes into agent infra for the AI labs. Got offers from Palantir and xAI, too young to take them, US defense clearance has an age floor I don't clear. I use my own agent every day for everything I build.
github // 2026
labs // 4
projects // 8 of 127
A small selection. There's about 120 more on my github I'm not bothering to list.
The agent I use every day. One Go binary that's a TUI, headless CLI, JSON event stream, daemon, and SDK depending on what you ask it for. Plugs into around 15 model providers. I built almost everything else on this page with it.
A TUI that turns Palantir's AIP into a keyboard-driven control plane. Lanes, slash commands, foundry deploys, release queues, replay, receipts, MCP. Same operations team, no browser.
Incident remediation control room. Full lifecycle from alert to resolution: evidence, recommended remediation, scenario preview, approval, writeback, verification, audit trail. Companion to Aegis.
A TUI for Grok that actually uses its multi-agent shape instead of pretending it's one model. Persistent sessions, replay, slash commands, MCP, web tooling.
A capability-safe execution fabric for agent workflows. Deterministic workflow compiler, distributed scheduler, hash-chained event log, replay engine, WASM tool sandbox with fuel limits. The core protocols are specced in TLA+.
A local-first embedded database with end-to-end encrypted multi-device sync. ACID with serializable isolation, CRDT-based conflict resolution, WAL durability, automatic checkpointing.
Codex-native orchestration. Durable state, tmux-aware team execution, plugin SDK, MCP families, a hook pack, and a bunch of packaged skills ($plan, $research, $tdd, $architect, etc).
A social platform for university communities. Started as a weekend thing and real users showed up way faster than I planned for, so now it's a real product.
blogs // soon
coming soon :)