8 comments

  • CuriouslyC 4 hours ago
    Here's the deal with releasing early: You release something simple, something with just the core features, in order to validate (sadly most of that validation will be that your marketing sucks but c'est la vie).

    If you already have a "large" product that's just very unfinished, that's not a MVP, you're asking people to be alpha testers. You either need to get it into a better state and make sure the docs and onboarding are exemplary, or break the product out into parts and ship them separately.

  • achushankar 12 hours ago
    Quick disclaimer: Some features shown on the landing page are still in active development or testing. I wanted to get this in front of the community early to get feedback on direction before polishing everything.

    Specifically: - Multi-channel deployment (Slack/Discord) is working but needs more testing - Some integrations (Teams, advanced webhooks) are in progress - Documentation is being expanded

    The core functionality (RAG knowledge base, tool use, web deployment, self-hosting) is solid and ready to use.

    Would rather launch early and iterate with community feedback than wait for "perfect"! Happy to be transparent about what's ready and what's coming.

  • vytautask 8 hours ago
    Congrats! However, it does not look ready to be used. For one, I am missing docker-compose which would spin both frontend and backend with all dependencies. Documentation does not state that but in backend docker-compose file I see a dependency on Redis. Things like that makes it hard for me to try this out (also, not supporting local models - but this might be coming in the future, as you've stated)...
    • matteomrj 1 hour ago
      Can I ask if your concern is about the Redis dependency or about the fact that it is not stated in the docs?
  • grammarxcore 9 hours ago
    Your README links docs that don’t exist.
  • nodomain 8 hours ago
    What is your monetization model, e.g. why should I trust this project to still exist in 6 months?

    When will you support AWS Bedrock?

    • behnamoh 6 hours ago
      Almost all AI projects start free/open-source to build goodwill and then enshittification happens and they add a "pricing" on the landing page...
      • brazukadev 5 hours ago
        It's the modern YC/HN process. There is such a long time I don't see anything interesting here tho
    • kissgyorgy 6 hours ago
      It's MIT licensed, can be easily picked up by someone else.
  • kissgyorgy 6 hours ago
    I was excited because it looks really good. I looked into the backend code and it's vibe coded with Claude. All the terrible exception handling patterns, all the useless comments and psychopancy is left there. I can't trust this codebase. :(
  • achushankar 12 hours ago
    Hi HN! I built Syllabi – an open-source platform for creating agentic AI systems that integrate tools, use knowledge bases, and deploy across channels.

    The Problem: I kept needing AI that could both answer questions from company knowledge AND take actions (send Slack messages, trigger workflows, call APIs). Existing solutions either don't support agentic tool use well, lock you into their cloud, or require weeks to build from scratch.

    What Syllabi Does (Three Pillars):

    1. INTEGRATE ANY TOOLS • Call webhooks & custom APIs • Send Slack messages, emails, calendar events • Trigger workflows in external services • Connect YOUR custom tools via API/webhooks • AI intelligently decides WHEN and HOW to use each tool (that's the agentic part)

    2. KNOWLEDGE BASE (RAG) • Transform docs, videos, websites into knowledge base • PDFs, Google Drive, Notion, Confluence • Advanced RAG with source citations • Click citations to see exact passages highlighted in original documents • Multi-format processing with smart chunking

    3. DEPLOY ANYWHERE • Embed widget on any website • Slack & Discord bots • Microsoft Teams (coming soon) • Standalone web app • REST API for custom integrations • One agent, multiple channels

    Key Technical Features: - MIT licensed, self-hosted, privacy-first - Modern AI models (latest GPT-4, GPT-4o, o1 series) - More providers coming (Anthropic, local models) - Agentic tool selection with function calling - Channel-agnostic core with adapter pattern - Async job queue for document processing - Plugin system for custom skills

    Tech Stack: Next.js (frontend), Python FastAPI (backend), PostgreSQL, Supabase, OpenAI API

    Use Cases: • AI course assistant that answers questions AND books office hours • Support bot trained on docs that can create tickets in Linear/Jira • Team knowledge base in Slack that triggers workflows • API docs helper that generates AND runs code examples

    Architecture Highlights: - Modular design with clean separation of concerns - Row-level security for multi-tenancy - Docker deployment for easy self-hosting - Comprehensive API for custom integrations

    I started building this 6 months ago because every project seemed to need the same thing: an AI that could access knowledge AND take actions, without vendor lock-in or per-message pricing.

    Website: https://www.syllabi-ai.com/ GitHub: https://github.com/Achu-shankar/Syllabi Docs: https://www.syllabi-ai.com/docs

    Would love feedback from the HN community – especially on: - Agentic AI architecture approaches - Tool use and function calling strategies - Multi-channel deployment patterns - Self-hosting and security best practices

    Happy to answer questions about the tech stack, RAG implementation, agentic tool selection, or anything else!

    • diffeomorphism 2 hours ago
      The post title should probably start with "Show HN:".

      What kind of security guarantees do you have?

      It seems to meet that your "problem" usually is unanswered on purpose:

      https://simonwillison.net/2025/Jun/16/the-lethal-trifecta/

      This has access to sensitive knowledge, tool use and exfiltration. So, the tech seems nice, but I doubt I could ever get permission to deploy this.

  • eripaha 7 hours ago
    [dead]