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Hermes Agent
Open-source autonomous agent software that runs on your server, keeps persistent memory, and automates multi-platform workflows.
Hermes Agent
Open-source autonomous agent that learns as it runs
What is Hermes Agent?
Hermes Agent is an open-source autonomous agent platform designed to run on your own server, maintain persistent memory, and execute workflows across chat, CLI, web, and sandboxed environments. It supports integrations like Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, Signal, Email, and CLI, along with scheduling, subagents, and browser automation.
How to use Hermes Agent?
- 1Install it with the provided shell script.
- 2Run the setup command to configure Hermes Agent.
- 3Connect the channels you want to use, such as chat apps, email, or CLI.
- 4Define tasks, schedules, or workflows in natural language.
- 5Let it run on your server and reuse its memory and generated skills over time.
Hermes Agent Key Features
- Runs on your own server
- Persistent memory that improves over time
- Multi-platform support including chat apps and CLI
- Natural language scheduled automations
- Subagents for delegated parallel work
- Sandboxed execution backends
- Browser control and web search
- Vision, image generation, and text-to-speech support
Hermes Agent Use Cases
- Automating recurring reports and briefings
- Running unattended backups and maintenance tasks
- Managing support or ops workflows across chat channels
- Delegating research and multi-step tasks to subagents
- Building long-running agent pipelines with persistent memory
Hermes Agent Pricing & Free Credits
Hermes Agent currently operates on a Free model.
Hermes Agent Pros & Cons
Pros
- Open source with MIT License
- Self-hosted for more control
- Persistent memory and reusable skills
- Supports multiple communication channels
- Includes sandboxing and parallel subagents
Cons
- Requires setup and server management
- May be more complex than a simple chatbot
- Best suited for users comfortable with self-hosting
What is Hermes Agent best for?
- Developers building autonomous workflows
- Teams that need a self-hosted agent
- Users automating multi-channel operations
- Technical users who want persistent agent memory