r/Hyperagent

Missing sign up credits

I used someone’s sign up code and I saw the banner that says +$1000 credits when I opened the link to sign up.

But after spending about $71, I got an additional charge of $21. Also confused because I see the settings should have capped/paused spending at $0 beyond the plan.

Did anyone else experience something similar?

reddit.com
u/Vegetable_Value4695 — 2 days ago

💬 Discord is Live! Come chat with us and Share your Agents!

Hey r/Hyperagent,

We spun up a Discord server for the community and it's ready.

Discord is for real-time chat, live office hours, quick help, and hanging out with other builders as you work. We'd love to see you over there!

What's on Discord:

  • 🚢 #ship-log — product updates and releases as they drop
  • 🙌 #agent-showcase — community builds get dedicated spotlight threads. Every Friday we share a curated roundup of the best new agents. This is my FAVORITE thing about the new discord.
  • ⁉️ #help — post questions, get real-time answers from the community and team
  • 💬 #general — the main chat
  • 🗓️ Office hours — live sessions with the team

Two programs running now:

  • 🏆 Agent Showcase ($1K credits) — Post about your agent build on LinkedIn, X, or Reddit, then apply. If selected, you get up to $1,000 in Hyperagent credits.
  • 🧩 Community Solvers ($100/solve) — Help answer questions in Discord #help. When your answer gets marked Solved, you earn $100 in credits (up to $1,000).

Join here: https://discord.gg/RyUhYPwy

See you around! Here, there, or both 👀.

— Vic

u/JeenyusJane — 1 day ago
▲ 3 r/Hyperagent+1 crossposts

Using Hyperagent to build custom interfaces (total novice)

I'm a total novice when it comes to any kind of coding, but I've found the ability to create custom interfaces on Airtable using Hyperagent absolutely extraordinary.

At first I used Hyperagent for simple things like inbox trawling and to-do lists (barely more than its basic chief of staff demo mode) but after providing context about my bases, it was able to help me translate a vision of an interface into a fully functioning interactive dashboard that my team use to track sales and bonuses daily in less than a day.

I've previously used Cursor for some basic tasks and in this case I asked Hyperagent to provide context and instructions, which I then uploaded to Cursor for it to do the build work. Not sure how necessary that truly was, but I essentially ended up passing messages between the two and it became a powerful way to execute the build - Hyperagent specialising in what I needed and was asking for, with Cursor specialising in the technical implementation.

We're definitely living in the age of sci-fi.

reddit.com
u/JeenyusJane — 2 days ago

Error message multiple times a day

I get this error message on two or three of my threads multiple times a day, and I don't know what I can do to fix it. It's very annoying and makes me want to, not use HyperAgent. And I've tried to notify support, but I can't seem to get anybody in support, so here I am on Reddit.

The AI service encountered a connectivity error. Please try again.

reddit.com
u/Enough-Operation3433 — 4 days ago

Right time

it seems like HyperAgent is fairly new, I’m addicted. like many, I was ready to evolve from generative chat to ai that can do things, agentic, whatever you want to call it. I started with Gemini, ai studio, very impressive, but not quite what I needed. then chagpt desktop,the perplexity computer, then open claw. open claw was very good, but I had a cloud account, which was slow and I have security concerns … and maintenance concerns. in trying to figure out open claw, this popped up… clickbait worked, open claw capabilities without the headaches. Perfect! 14 agents in 3 days, working great. more incredibly, it seems to get better, on its own. wow! so glad to find this early. game changer.

reddit.com
u/Bubbly_Crazy6508 — 7 days ago

Introducing: Hyperagent Teams!

Bring your team into Hyperagent. Share agents and skills with control over who runs what, scoped with the right credentials.

Until now, Hyperagent has been a powerful tool for individuals: your agents, your skills, your library. Teams solves that. It's the missing collaboration layer, designed so that going from "this works for me" to "this works for my team" takes minutes, not migrations.

Team is a shared place in Hyperagent that holds Agents and Skills that your whole team can see and use.

What you can do with a Team

Share agents you've built, on your terms.  The agents you've assembled, with their prompts, integrations, schedules, and knowledge, can now live in a Team where every member can run them. 

When you share an agent to a team they're shared as run-only: members can invoke it but can't see or edit its configuration, and runs are billed to you, the agent's owner. Runs are attributable in the activity log to the user who initiated them, and the Team owner can revoke access at any time without affecting prior runs. When you make updates to your agent, the updates propagate, and are ready to use the next time a teammate runs your agents.

https://preview.redd.it/26gz2tumo61h1.png?width=1924&format=png&auto=webp&s=4db89bef6846270b6f376110484f955c59e111f6

Share skills. Additionally, you can share skills independent of agents. You can share skills in three different ways:

  • Share with your credentials. Your teammates run the skill using your API access (The key is stored securely and only visible to you). The right choice for "platform" skills where you want one source of truth and one invoice: internal data-warehouse queries, a vetted vendor API, anything where centralized credentials are a feature, not a bug.
  • Users bring their credentials. Share a skill, but each teammate provides their own keys before they can run it. The right choice when each person needs to be the one identified to the downstream system, or when audit and compliance require that every call should be attributable to the person who made it. Users can't run the skill until they've saved their own credentials, and their credentials are private to them.
  • Let them fork. Sometimes a teammate needs the skill you wrote, but wants to tweak it for their own specific use case. Forking creates an independent copy in their own Hyperagent account. From that point on it's theirs to edit; your original keeps living its life.

For shared skills, (not forks) updates work like they do for Agents. When you make updates to your Skill, the updates propagate, and are ready to use the next time a teammate runs your Skill.

Creating a Team

To create a team. Open the Teams menu in the right sidebar and click Create Team. Give it a name and a description. You're now the Owner.

From here you can add existing Skills and Agents to the team.

https://reddit.com/link/1tdennr/video/wg08lraxp61h1/player

Invite Team Members.

  • Email invites for named recipients. If your invitee isn't on Hyperagent yet, they'll get routed through a sign-up flow that lands them in the Team automatically.
  • Link invites. One link, anyone signed into Hyperagent can join.

Team Roles

  • Owners rename, configure, invite, and delete. There can be multiple owners per team.
  • Members do everything else: view agents, run agents, use skills, contribute their own.

Using a Shared Agent

To use an Agent shared by another teammate. Navigate to your team, and select the agent you want to use. You'll be able to see the name of the agent and the short description, as well as when it was last updated.

To run the shared agent, click New Thread. And start using the agent in a thread.

A Shared Agent. Very Meta.

TL;DR

Teams is how Hyperagent goes from "my workspace" to "our workspace." Create a Team, invite people, share agents and skills with the credentials posture that fits your needs.

P.S. We're working toward rolling out a shared billing model. If you're interested, PM me!
P.P.S. I'm working on Product Docs!

reddit.com
u/JeenyusJane — 8 days ago