Automate Fixer IO tasks via Rube MCP (Composio). Always search tools first for current schemas.
Skills(SKILL.md)は、AIエージェント(Claude Code、Cursor、Codexなど)に特定の能力を追加するための設定ファイルです。
詳しく見る →Automate Fixer IO tasks via Rube MCP (Composio). Always search tools first for current schemas.
Automate LaunchDarkly feature flag management -- list projects and environments, create and delete trigger workflows, and track code references via the Composio MCP integration.
Automate product management workflows in Productboard -- manage features, notes, objectives, components, and releases through natural language commands.
QuickBooks Automation: manage invoices, customers, accounts, and payments in QuickBooks Online for streamlined bookkeeping
Practical naked-eye and binocular sky observing. Covers dark adaptation, limiting magnitude, constellation recognition, star hopping, the messier and Caldwell catalogs accessible without a telescope, the Moon, planets, meteor showers, aurorae, and the ethics and habits of observing under light-polluted and dark skies. Use when teaching someone to find their way around the sky, planning a naked-eye session, or choosing a first binocular tour.
Corporate finance fundamentals for evaluating business decisions under cost, time, and risk constraints. Covers time value of money, net present value, internal rate of return, payback period, break-even analysis, cost-benefit analysis, debt vs equity, working capital, and the basic financial statements. Use when evaluating an investment, sizing a funding round, structuring a capital stack, or reading a balance sheet.
Entrepreneurship, innovation, and disruption for starting, scaling, and defending new ventures. Covers opportunity recognition, jobs-to-be-done, the disruptive innovation framework, sustaining vs disruptive innovation, platform businesses, network effects, minimum viable product, customer development, and the startup lifecycle from idea to exit. Use when evaluating a venture idea, positioning a new product, interpreting a competitive threat, or designing a platform.
Organizational strategy and management theory for business decision-making. Covers objectives-based management, the knowledge-worker firm, decentralization, the five management tasks, strategy-as-practice, managerial roles, and the distinction between efficiency and effectiveness. Use when structuring an organization, setting objectives, allocating decision rights, or critiquing a strategy document.
Atomic theory, periodic table organization, electron configuration, periodic trends, and isotopes/radioactivity. Covers Dalton through quantum mechanical models, electron shell filling (Aufbau, Hund, Pauli), periodic law and block structure, trend prediction (electronegativity, ionization energy, atomic radius, electron affinity), isotope notation, nuclear stability, and radioactive decay modes. Use when teaching, problem-solving, or reasoning about atomic-level chemistry.
Ionic, covalent, and metallic bonding, Lewis structures, VSEPR theory, molecular geometry, polarity, and intermolecular forces. Covers octet rule and exceptions, formal charge, resonance, sigma/pi bonds, orbital hybridization, electronegativity-driven bond classification, VSEPR electron-domain and molecular geometries, dipole moments, and the four intermolecular force types (London dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding, ion-dipole). Use when predicting molecular shapes, bond properties, or physical behavior from molecular structure.
States of matter, phase transitions, kinetic molecular theory, atmospheric chemistry, green chemistry, and sustainable synthesis. Covers solid/liquid/gas/plasma properties, phase diagrams, vapor pressure, gas laws, ozone chemistry, greenhouse effect, the 12 principles of green chemistry, atom economy, solvent selection, and catalysis for sustainability. Use when reasoning about material properties, environmental chemistry, or designing greener chemical processes.
Computational thinking as a problem-solving discipline independent of programming languages. Covers the four pillars (decomposition, pattern recognition, abstraction, algorithm design), computational problem-solving methodology (understand, decompose, generalize, formalize, verify), abstraction levels (from hardware through user interface), modeling and simulation, automata and formal languages (DFA, NFA, regular expressions, context-free grammars, Turing machines), computational complexity classes (P, NP, NP-complete, undecidable), and constructionist pedagogy (learning by building, Logo, Scratch, physical computing). Use when approaching unfamiliar problems, teaching problem-solving strategies, analyzing problem complexity, or bridging between domain knowledge and computational solutions.
Deductive and inductive reasoning, formal and informal logical structure, validity, soundness, and rules of inference. Covers propositional logic, quantified reasoning, syllogisms, common inference patterns (modus ponens, modus tollens, hypothetical syllogism, disjunctive syllogism), and the distinction between deductive certainty and inductive probability. Use when the question is not whether a premise is true but whether the reasoning from premises to conclusion is logically valid.
Theory and policy of international economic exchange. Covers comparative advantage (Ricardo, Heckscher-Ohlin), gains from trade, trade policy instruments (tariffs, quotas, subsidies), exchange rate determination, balance of payments, globalization dynamics, trade agreements, and the political economy of protectionism. Use when analyzing why countries trade, who wins and loses from trade, how exchange rates move, or the effects of trade policy interventions.
Foundations of individual economic decision-making, market structures, and strategic interaction. Covers supply and demand analysis, price elasticity, consumer and producer surplus, market structures (perfect competition, monopoly, oligopoly, monopolistic competition), game theory (Nash equilibrium, dominant strategies, repeated games), and welfare economics. Use when analyzing individual markets, firm behavior, pricing strategies, consumer choice, or strategic interactions between economic agents.
Distributional analysis of environmental benefits and burdens across communities. Covers the historical origins of environmental justice in the U.S. civil rights tradition, siting and exposure disparities, indigenous rights and land stewardship, climate justice at global and intergenerational scales, procedural vs. distributional vs. recognition justice, and the environmental justice screening tools used by regulators. Use when analyzing who bears environmental harm and who receives environmental benefit, or when designing interventions whose distributional consequences matter.
GSD tutorial and command reference. Use when user is new to GSD or asks about commands.
Causal reasoning in historical analysis. Covers distinguishing immediate from underlying causes, tracing chains of causation across time scales, identifying unintended consequences, and applying counterfactual reasoning to assess causal significance. Use when analyzing why historical events occurred, evaluating the relative weight of causes, or assessing whether outcomes were inevitable or contingent.
The household as an economic unit with income, expenses, savings, and debt. Covers the envelope method, fixed vs variable expenses, the 50-30-20 baseline, emergency reserves, the true cost of ownership, opportunity cost in household decisions, and the distinction between a budget and a spending plan. Use when building a household budget, diagnosing why a household is always over, planning a major purchase, or teaching financial literacy at the household level.
Designing the household as an operating system. Covers room-function mapping, work-triangle analysis, storage topology, utility flow, and the Richards/Beecher lineage that treats the home as an engineered environment rather than a stage set. Use when planning a new kitchen, reorganizing a room, diagnosing friction in a daily routine, or teaching a learner to see the house as a system with inputs, flows, and outputs.
Sound systems of human language -- phoneme inventories, the International Phonetic Alphabet, articulatory and acoustic phonetics, phonological rules, suprasegmental features (stress, tone, intonation), and ear training for non-native sound perception. Covers place and manner of articulation, voicing contrasts, vowel space, minimal pair analysis, allophonic variation, phonotactic constraints, connected speech phenomena (assimilation, elision, liaison), and prosody across language families. Use when analyzing pronunciation, teaching sound systems, performing phonemic transcription, or diagnosing intelligibility problems in any language.
Predicate logic -- also called first-order logic (FOL) or quantificational logic -- extends propositional logic with the machinery of quantification. Where propositional logic can express "Socrates is
FFmpeg media processing — video/audio conversion, trimming, encoding, filters, streaming. CLI and ffmpeg.wasm patterns.
Yoga practice with an emphasis on alignment, props, and staged progression as the Iyengar lineage teaches it, alongside enough context about the broader lineage landscape (Krishnamacharya's three students, modern Hatha, Ashtanga vinyasa, restorative, Yin, and chair yoga) that a routing agent can place a user correctly before giving instruction. Covers asana families, alignment heuristics, prop use, sequencing, and the non-negotiable injury-prevention rules. Use for any query about yoga postures, home practice design, teacher-training-level questions, or whether a given pose is safe for a given body.
Musical form and structural analysis covering binary, ternary, rondo, sonata, theme-and-variations, and popular song forms. Covers formal archetypes (AB, ABA, ABACA, sonata-allegro), 12-bar blues, arch form, minimalist process forms, strophic and through-composed designs, and formal analysis methodology for both score study and listening. Use when determining the structural plan of a piece, analyzing sectional relationships, or understanding how form shapes musical narrative.
The discipline of keeping a field notebook — words, pictures, numbers, metadata, and questions captured during sustained outdoor observation. Covers the Laws notebook method, the sit-spot practice, phenology recording, sketch-first-name-later discipline, and the long-term research value of accumulated journals. Use when the task is to teach or structure ongoing field observation rather than answer a one-shot identification.
Runtime HAL for multi-runtime agent orchestration. Detects active AI assistant (Claude Code, Codex, Gemini, Cursor) and exposes uniform interface for startup injection, GUPP enforcement, and communication selection.
Provides compliance, governance, and supply chain security guidance for cloud-native systems. Covers OPA Rego policies, Kyverno cluster policies, SBOM generation, SLSA provenance, audit trail design, and regulatory framework mapping. Use when user mentions 'compliance', 'governance', 'OPA', 'kyverno', 'SBOM', 'SLSA', 'audit', 'policy-as-code', 'SOC2', 'HIPAA', 'PCI-DSS', 'artifact signing'.
Provides Docker and containerization best practices including multi-stage builds, security hardening, and compose patterns. Use when writing Dockerfiles, optimizing images, setting up containers, or when user mentions 'Docker', 'container', 'Dockerfile', 'docker-compose', 'image'.
Theory of knowledge and justification across the Western philosophical tradition. Covers the tripartite analysis (justified true belief), Gettier problems, foundationalism vs. coherentism vs. reliabilism, skepticism (Cartesian and external world), rationalism vs. empiricism, Kant's synthesis, social and feminist epistemology, pragmatist epistemology, naturalized epistemology, and philosophy of science (Popper, Kuhn, Lakatos, Feyerabend). Use when analyzing claims about knowledge, evidence, certainty, justification, or scientific method.
Ethical theory and moral reasoning across the major philosophical traditions. Covers normative ethics (consequentialism, deontology, virtue ethics, care ethics, existentialist ethics), metaethics (moral realism, anti-realism, emotivism, error theory), and applied ethics (bioethics, environmental ethics, AI ethics, just war theory). Includes a moral dilemma analysis framework with worked examples applying multiple frameworks to the same case.
Metaphysical inquiry into the fundamental nature of reality. Covers ontology (what exists), substance and properties, universals vs. particulars, free will and determinism, personal identity, philosophy of mind (dualism, physicalism, functionalism, the hard problem of consciousness), causation, time, possible worlds, Buddhist metaphysics (Nagarjuna's sunyata, dependent origination, two truths doctrine), and process philosophy (Whitehead). Use when exploring questions about existence, consciousness, identity, free will, or the fundamental structure of reality.
Coaching as teaching — John Wooden's Pyramid of Success, practice design, feedback quality, instructional economy, and the craft of deliberate skill development. Covers the difference between knowing the game and teaching it, Wooden's actual practice methods as documented by Gallimore and Tharp, skill progression through part-whole teaching, the four-to-one positive feedback discipline, and the habits that distinguish effective coaches from merely knowledgeable ones. Use when designing practices, improving instruction, mentoring young coaches, or framing sport leadership as an educational activity.
Inclusive physical education for gender, ability, and developmental variation. Covers the history of women in sport from Berenson's women's basketball rules forward, adapted PE for disability and chronic illness, universal design for learning in PE, gender-equitable participation, and the ethical obligations of a PE teacher to serve every learner in the room. Use when adapting lessons for disability, designing co-educational units, addressing participation gaps, or teaching the history of inclusion as part of the PE curriculum.
Group problem solving with explicit structure. Covers shared mental models, role allocation, cognitive division of labor, building on ideas (yes-and), productive disagreement, and the moves that prevent social loafing and groupthink. Use for problems that exceed individual capacity or benefit from multiple expertise areas.
Systematic comprehension of a problem before any solving attempt. Covers restating the problem, identifying knowns, unknowns, constraints, and goal, recognizing problem type (well-defined, ill-defined, optimization, decision, puzzle), and decomposing large problems into tractable sub-problems. Use at the start of any problem-solving session to avoid solving the wrong problem.
Risk is uncertainty that matters. Every project operates under uncertainty — requirements change, dependencies break, people leave, estimates miss. Risk management does not eliminate uncertainty; it m
Word learning strategies, vocabulary instruction, and lexical development for reading comprehension. Covers Beck's three-tier vocabulary model, context clue strategies (definition, synonym, antonym, example, inference), morphological analysis (prefixes, suffixes, roots, etymology), word consciousness and word play, academic vocabulary across disciplines, figurative language (metaphor, simile, idiom, personification, hyperbole), dictionary and reference skills, and vocabulary-comprehension connections. Use when teaching vocabulary, selecting words for instruction, analyzing word knowledge demands of a text, or building academic vocabulary.
Git-friendly, crash-recoverable state persistence for the Gastown orchestration chipset. Manages agent identities, work items, hooks, convoys, and merge requests as JSON files with atomic write operations.
Comparative religion as a scholarly discipline — cross-tradition analysis of doctrines, practices, and experiences without collapsing traditions into each other or ranking them against a normative standard. Covers the history of the discipline (from Max Muller through Eliade, Smart, Smith, and the contemporary critique), typologies (theism, monism, polytheism, non-theism), the dimensions framework (doctrinal, ritual, ethical, experiential, mythic, institutional, material), and the ethics of comparison. Use when a query asks how a concept, practice, or text functions across multiple traditions.
A workshop is a designed environment for skilled work. Its organization, layout, and habits are not incidental to the craft performed in it — they are the physical substrate on which the craft depends
Poetic forms, techniques, and analysis for reading and writing poetry. Covers fixed forms (sonnet, villanelle, haiku, ghazal, sestina, pantoum), free verse and open form, prosody and meter (iambic pentameter, trochee, anapest, dactylic, spondee, scansion), sound devices (alliteration, assonance, consonance, rhyme schemes, enjambment, caesura), figurative language (metaphor, simile, metonymy, synecdoche, personification, apostrophe), imagery and the image (concrete image, objective correlative, imagism), and the line as unit of meaning (lineation, line break, visual form). Use when writing poetry, analyzing poems, or working with compression and sound.
Electronics Educational Pack — routes queries to 15 modules covering Ohm's law through PCB design
Use when GSD commands are failing or .planning/ artifacts look inconsistent. Run before any GSD execute-phase or verify-work attempt to catch cross-artifact mismatches early.
GSD-OS bootstrap guide — from freshly unzipped directory to fully operational development environment. Covers prerequisite detection, workspace setup, service bring-up, magic level adaptation, error recovery, and the you-can't-break-it guarantee.
Guidance for verifying documentation accuracy against running OpenStack infrastructure. Use when detecting documentation drift, validating operations procedures against live systems, or confirming that runbooks produce expected results on the deployed cloud. Implements NASA Product Verification (SP-6105 SS 5.3) applied to documentation artifacts.
Guidance for writing OpenStack operations manual procedures following NASA document standards. Use when authoring per-service procedures, maintenance workflows, or operational documentation that must be verified against running infrastructure.
Kolla-Ansible deployment engine skill for containerized OpenStack lifecycle management. Use when bootstrapping, deploying, reconfiguring, or upgrading OpenStack environments. Covers globals.yml configuration, inventory management, container operations, rolling upgrades, password management, and troubleshooting deployment failures across all service containers. This is the meta-skill that manages the deployment lifecycle for all OpenStack services.
OpenStack Neutron software-defined networking service. Provides network abstraction for cloud instances including security groups, floating IPs, DHCP, L3 routing, ML2 plugin architecture with OVN/OVS backends, network namespaces, provider and tenant networks, VXLAN/VLAN/flat network types, and port management. Use for deploying, configuring, operating, and troubleshooting OpenStack networking.
OpenStack security operations skill for hardening, certificate management, and security posture assessment of cloud infrastructure. Covers TLS certificate lifecycle (generation, deployment, rotation, expiry monitoring), security group management (default deny, minimum required openings), RBAC policy customization (per-service policy.yaml), network segmentation (management vs tenant vs external), audit logging (Keystone CADF events), vulnerability assessment procedures, compliance auditing, intrusion detection patterns, incident response procedures (credential compromise, instance compromise), password rotation, and API rate limiting. Use when hardening OpenStack, managing certificates, auditing security posture, or responding to security incidents.