AI tool comparison
Hermes Agent vs SMF (Semantic Memory Filesystem)
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
Hermes Agent
The self-improving AI agent that learns from every session
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Hermes Agent is NousResearch's open-source AI assistant built around a closed-loop learning architecture — the agent doesn't just execute tasks, it synthesizes new skills from complex interactions, self-improves those skills during use, and maintains a deepening model of the user across sessions. With 115,000+ GitHub stars, it has become one of the most-adopted autonomous agent projects in the open-source ecosystem. The system runs on 200+ models via OpenRouter, Nous Portal, NVIDIA NIM, and others, with tool-based provider switching that requires zero code changes. Users can interact via a terminal interface or through Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, or Signal — all from a single gateway process. Built-in cron scheduling enables fully unattended workflows, and the agent can spawn isolated subagents for parallel workstreams. What sets Hermes apart from typical agent frameworks is the memory layer: it captures observations via five session hooks, stores them in SQLite with FTS5 search, and uses a Chroma vector database for semantic retrieval — cutting context costs by ~10x versus naive approaches. The result is an agent that genuinely accumulates expertise over time rather than starting from scratch each session.
Developer Tools
SMF (Semantic Memory Filesystem)
Your filesystem IS the vector database for AI agents
75%
Panel ship
—
Community
Paid
Entry
SMF (Semantic Memory Filesystem) is an open-source Python library that treats the POSIX filesystem as the native memory infrastructure for AI agents. The core bet: instead of standing up a vector database, embedding service, and retrieval pipeline, you model your agent's memory as ordinary directories, files, and symlinks — then use the OS's own tools for retrieval. Entities are directories, relationships are symlinks, metadata is file attributes, and search is built on grep and find. The appeal is radical simplicity. Every developer already understands the filesystem. Memory built on top of it is inspectable with any editor, versionable with git, and portable across machines with rsync. There's no new query language to learn, no vector index to maintain, and no external service to keep running. Dynamis-Labs argues that for many agent memory use cases, semantic similarity search is overkill — you need entity graphs and efficient lookup, which the filesystem already provides. With only 7 stars and created yesterday (April 14), SMF is in very early stages. But the approach has attracted immediate discussion from developers frustrated with the operational overhead of vector databases for relatively structured memory tasks. It's a contrarian bet that's worth watching.
Reviewer scorecard
“The closed-loop learning loop is the real innovation here — most agent frameworks just wrap an LLM call. Hermes builds a compound skill library over time, and the multi-platform gateway (WhatsApp, Slack, Telegram all at once) is genuinely production-ready. 115K stars doesn't lie.”
“I've been burned too many times by embedding pipelines that drift when models update and vector indexes that mysteriously degrade. Filesystem-native memory is zero-dependency, trivially inspectable, and you can version it with git. For structured agent memory this is genuinely compelling.”
“Self-improving agents sound great until your agent starts learning the wrong lessons. There's no clear audit trail for what skills get synthesized or how to roll back bad ones. AGPL licensing also creates friction for teams building proprietary products on top of it.”
“The filesystem approach breaks down the moment you need fuzzy semantic matching — 'find memories related to customer churn' doesn't map to a grep. For anything beyond exact lookup, you're going to bolt on a vector DB anyway and now you have two systems. This is clever for toy agents, not production.”
“This is the closest thing we have to a personal AI that actually compounds over time. The skill synthesis mechanism is a preview of how agents will bootstrap expertise in specialized domains without manual prompt engineering. The compounding knowledge graph is what AGI infrastructure looks like at the indie layer.”
“The insight that the filesystem is a perfectly good entity-relationship store is underappreciated. As agents move toward local-first architectures, having memory that's portable, inspectable, and git-versionable becomes a serious advantage over cloud-hosted vector DBs.”
“The multi-platform gateway is a genuine workflow unlock for creators — your AI assistant accessible via WhatsApp while traveling, or Discord during a stream, all with shared memory context. The voice and visual tool integrations are still thin, but the coordination layer is solid.”
“I love tools that demystify AI plumbing. The idea that agent memory could just be files I can open in a text editor makes the whole system feel less like a black box. This is the kind of transparency that builds trust.”
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