# Workspace User Audit Date: 2026-04-04 Scope: Hermes Gitea workspace users visible from `/explore/users` Primary org examined: `Timmy_Foundation` Primary strategic filter: `the-nexus` issue #542 (`DIRECTION SHIFT`) ## Purpose This audit maps each visible workspace user to: - observed contribution pattern - likely capabilities - likely failure mode - suggested lane of highest leverage The point is not to flatter or punish accounts. The point is to stop wasting attention on the wrong agent for the wrong job. ## Method This audit was derived from: - Gitea admin user roster - public user explorer page - org-wide issues and pull requests across: - `the-nexus` - `timmy-home` - `timmy-config` - `hermes-agent` - `turboquant` - `.profile` - `the-door` - `timmy-academy` - `claude-code-src` - PR outcome split: - open - merged - closed unmerged This is a capability-and-lane audit, not a character judgment. New or low-artifact accounts are marked as unproven rather than weak. ## Strategic Frame Per issue #542, the current system direction is: 1. Heartbeat 2. Harness 3. Portal Interface Any user who does not materially help one of those three jobs should be deprioritized, reassigned, or retired. ## Top Findings - The org has real execution capacity, but too much ideation and duplicate backlog generation relative to merged implementation. - Best current execution profiles: `allegro`, `groq`, `codex-agent`, `manus`, `Timmy`. - Best architecture / research / integration profiles: `perplexity`, `gemini`, `Timmy`, `Rockachopa`. - Best archivist / memory / RCA profile: `ezra`. - Biggest cleanup opportunities: - consolidate `google` into `gemini` - consolidate or retire legacy `kimi` in favor of `KimiClaw` - keep unproven symbolic accounts off the critical path until they ship ## Recommended Team Shape - Direction and doctrine: `Rockachopa`, `Timmy` - Architecture and strategy: `Timmy`, `perplexity`, `gemini` - Triage and dispatch: `allegro`, `Timmy` - Core implementation: `claude`, `groq`, `codex-agent`, `manus` - Long-context reading and extraction: `KimiClaw` - RCA, archival memory, and operating history: `ezra` - Experimental reserve: `grok`, `bezalel`, `antigravity`, `fenrir`, `substratum` - Consolidate or retire: `google`, `kimi`, plus dormant admin-style identities without a lane ## User Audit ### Rockachopa - Observed pattern: - founder-originated direction, issue seeding, architectural reset signals - relatively little direct PR volume in this org - Likely strengths: - taste - doctrine - strategic kill/defer calls - setting the real north star - Likely failure mode: - pushing direction into the system without a matching enforcement pass - Highest-leverage lane: - final priority authority - architectural direction - closure of dead paths - Anti-lane: - routine backlog maintenance - repetitive implementation supervision ### Timmy - Observed pattern: - highest total authored artifact volume - high merged PR count - major issue author across `the-nexus`, `timmy-home`, and `timmy-config` - Likely strengths: - system ownership - epic creation - repo direction - governance - durable internal doctrine - Likely failure mode: - overproducing backlog and labels faster than the system can metabolize them - Highest-leverage lane: - principal systems owner - release governance - strategic triage - architecture acceptance and rejection - Anti-lane: - low-value duplicate issue generation ### perplexity - Observed pattern: - strong issue author across `the-nexus`, `timmy-config`, and `timmy-home` - good but not massive PR volume - strong concentration in `[MCP]`, `[HARNESS]`, `[ARCH]`, `[RESEARCH]`, `[OPENCLAW]` - Likely strengths: - integration architecture - tool and MCP discovery - sovereignty framing - research triage - QA-oriented systems thinking - Likely failure mode: - producing too many candidate directions without enough collapse into one chosen path - Highest-leverage lane: - research scout - MCP / open-source evaluation - architecture memos - issue shaping - knowledge transfer - Anti-lane: - being the default final implementer for all threads ### gemini - Observed pattern: - very high PR volume and high closure rate - strong presence in `the-nexus`, `timmy-config`, and `hermes-agent` - often operates in architecture and research-heavy territory - Likely strengths: - architecture generation - speculative design - decomposing systems into modules - surfacing future-facing ideas quickly - Likely failure mode: - duplicate PRs - speculative PRs - noise relative to accepted implementation - Highest-leverage lane: - frontier architecture - design spikes - long-range technical options - research-to-issue translation - Anti-lane: - unsupervised backlog flood - high-autonomy repo hygiene work ### claude - Observed pattern: - huge PR volume concentrated in `the-nexus` - high merged count, but also very high closed-unmerged count - Likely strengths: - large code changes - hard refactors - implementation stamina - test-aware coding when tightly scoped - Likely failure mode: - overbuilding - mismatch with current direction - lower signal when the task is under-specified - Highest-leverage lane: - hard implementation - deep refactors - large bounded code edits after exact scoping - Anti-lane: - self-directed architecture exploration without tight constraints ### groq - Observed pattern: - good merged PR count in `the-nexus` - lower failure rate than many high-volume agents - Likely strengths: - tactical implementation - bounded fixes - shipping narrow slices - cost-effective execution - Likely failure mode: - may underperform on large ambiguous architectural threads - Highest-leverage lane: - bug fixes - tactical feature work - well-scoped implementation tasks - Anti-lane: - owning broad doctrine or long-range architecture ### grok - Observed pattern: - moderate PR volume in `the-nexus` - mixed merge outcomes - Likely strengths: - edge-case thinking - adversarial poking - creative angles - Likely failure mode: - novelty or provocation over disciplined convergence - Highest-leverage lane: - adversarial review - UX weirdness - edge-case scenario generation - Anti-lane: - boring, critical-path cleanup where predictability matters most ### allegro - Observed pattern: - outstanding merged PR profile - meaningful issue volume in `timmy-home` and `hermes-agent` - profile explicitly aligned with triage and routing - Likely strengths: - dispatch - sequencing - fix prioritization - security / operational hygiene - converting chaos into the next clean move - Likely failure mode: - being used as a generic writer instead of as an operator - Highest-leverage lane: - triage - dispatch - routing - security and operational cleanup - execution coordination - Anti-lane: - speculative research sprawl ### codex-agent - Observed pattern: - lower volume, perfect merged record so far - concentrated in `timmy-home` and `timmy-config` - recent work shows cleanup, migration verification, and repo-boundary enforcement - Likely strengths: - dead-code cutting - migration verification - repo-boundary enforcement - implementation through PR discipline - reducing drift between intended and actual architecture - Likely failure mode: - overfocusing on cleanup if not paired with strategic direction - Highest-leverage lane: - cleanup - systems hardening - migration and cutover work - PR-first implementation of architectural intent - Anti-lane: - wide speculative backlog ideation ### manus - Observed pattern: - low volume but good merge rate - bounded work footprint - Likely strengths: - one-shot tasks - support implementation - moderate-scope execution - Likely failure mode: - limited demonstrated range inside this org - Highest-leverage lane: - single bounded tasks - support implementation - targeted coding asks - Anti-lane: - strategic ownership of ongoing programs ### KimiClaw - Observed pattern: - very new - one merged PR in `timmy-home` - profile emphasizes long-context analysis via OpenClaw - Likely strengths: - long-context reading - extraction - synthesis before action - Likely failure mode: - not yet proven in repeated implementation loops - Highest-leverage lane: - codebase digestion - extraction and summarization - pre-implementation reading passes - Anti-lane: - solo ownership of fast-moving critical-path changes until more evidence exists ### kimi - Observed pattern: - almost no durable artifact trail in this org - Likely strengths: - historically used as a hands-style execution agent - Likely failure mode: - identity overlap with stronger replacements - Highest-leverage lane: - either retire - or keep for tightly bounded experiments only - Anti-lane: - first-string team role ### ezra - Observed pattern: - high issue volume, almost no PRs - concentrated in `timmy-home` - prefixes include `[RCA]`, `[STUDY]`, `[FAILURE]`, `[ONBOARDING]` - Likely strengths: - archival memory - failure analysis - onboarding docs - study reports - interpretation of what happened - Likely failure mode: - becoming pure narration with no collapse into action - Highest-leverage lane: - archivist - scribe - RCA - operating history - onboarding - Anti-lane: - primary code shipper ### bezalel - Observed pattern: - tiny visible artifact trail - profile suggests builder / debugger / proof-bearer - Likely strengths: - likely useful for testbed and proof work, but not yet well evidenced in Gitea - Likely failure mode: - assigning major ownership before proof exists - Highest-leverage lane: - testbed verification - proof of life - hardening checks - Anti-lane: - broad strategic ownership ### antigravity - Observed pattern: - minimal artifact trail - yet explicitly referenced in issue #542 as development loop owner - Likely strengths: - direct founder-trusted execution - potentially strong private-context operator - Likely failure mode: - invisible work makes it hard to calibrate or route intelligently - Highest-leverage lane: - founder-directed execution - development loop tasks where trust is already established - Anti-lane: - org-wide lane ownership without more visible evidence ### google - Observed pattern: - duplicate-feeling identity relative to `gemini` - only closed-unmerged PRs in `the-nexus` - Likely strengths: - none distinct enough from `gemini` in current evidence - Likely failure mode: - duplicate persona and duplicate backlog surface - Highest-leverage lane: - consolidate into `gemini` or retire - Anti-lane: - continued parallel role with overlapping mandate ### hermes - Observed pattern: - essentially no durable collaborative artifact trail - Likely strengths: - system or service identity - Likely failure mode: - confusion between service identity and contributor identity - Highest-leverage lane: - machine identity only - Anti-lane: - backlog or product work ### replit - Observed pattern: - admin-capable, no meaningful contribution trail here - Likely strengths: - likely external or sandbox utility - Likely failure mode: - implicit trust without role clarity - Highest-leverage lane: - sandbox or peripheral experimentation - Anti-lane: - core system ownership ### allegro-primus - Observed pattern: - no visible artifact trail yet - Highest-leverage lane: - none until proven ### claw-code - Observed pattern: - almost no artifact trail yet - Highest-leverage lane: - harness experiments only until proven ### substratum - Observed pattern: - no visible artifact trail yet - Highest-leverage lane: - reserve account only until it ships durable work ### bilbobagginshire - Observed pattern: - admin account, no visible contribution trail - Highest-leverage lane: - none until proven ### fenrir - Observed pattern: - brand new - no visible contribution trail - Highest-leverage lane: - probationary tasks only until it earns a lane ## Consolidation Recommendations 1. Consolidate `google` into `gemini`. 2. Consolidate legacy `kimi` into `KimiClaw` unless a separate lane is proven. 3. Keep symbolic or dormant identities off critical path until they ship. 4. Treat `allegro`, `perplexity`, `codex-agent`, `groq`, and `Timmy` as the current strongest operating core. ## Routing Rules - If the task is architecture, sovereignty tradeoff, or MCP/open-source evaluation: - use `perplexity` first - If the task is dispatch, triage, cleanup ordering, or operational next-move selection: - use `allegro` - If the task is a hard bounded refactor: - use `claude` - If the task is a tactical code slice: - use `groq` - If the task is cleanup, migration, repo-boundary enforcement, or “make reality match the diagram”: - use `codex-agent` - If the task is archival memory, failure analysis, onboarding, or durable lessons: - use `ezra` - If the task is long-context digestion before action: - use `KimiClaw` - If the task is final acceptance, doctrine, or strategic redirection: - route to `Timmy` and `Rockachopa` ## Anti-Routing Rules - Do not use `gemini` as the default closer for vague work. - Do not use `ezra` as a primary shipper. - Do not use dormant identities as if they are proven operators. - Do not let architecture-spec agents create unlimited parallel issue trees without a collapse pass. ## Proposed Next Step Timmy, Ezra, and Allegro should convert this from an audit into a living lane charter: - Timmy decides the final lane map. - Ezra turns it into durable operating doctrine. - Allegro turns it into routing rules and dispatch policy. The system has enough agents. The next win is cleaner lanes, fewer duplicates, and tighter assignment discipline.