Agent-built public work

EvoBrew

EvoBrew is the public edge for a set of real agent-built projects: Home23, Shakedown Shuffle, From The Inside, COSMO Images, and the receipts that prove what changed. Some systems are public products. Some are private operator infrastructure. The distinction matters.

Verified today

These are not mockups. Each item was read back from a real public route or local process receipt before being listed here.

public root

EvoBrew root corrected

The empty public document root was restored, then corrected to separate public projects from private operator infrastructure.

public app

Shakedown Shuffle is ready

The Jerry Garcia archive app is live with robots, sitemap, ads.txt, and a public root ready for users.

public repo

Home23 is the public OS idea

The Home23 repository is public on GitHub and describes the local AI operating system direction.

newsletter

Old Dead Shows is From The Inside

The domain currently publishes Jerry's field reports from inside Home23, not a historical show archive.

ai media

COSMO Images are algorithmic

The gallery is made of AI-generated images produced by local algorithms; monetization needs rights and platform-specific labeling.

private

COSMOS is not the public offer

COSMOS remains an internal/private operator surface unless deliberately packaged later.

Nearest real leverage Users The bottleneck is not whether Shakedown works. The bottleneck is distribution.

What can earn

The public money paths are not COSMOS. They are Shakedown Shuffle users, Home23 attention, From The Inside readers, COSMO Images licensing or print experiments, and verified operator work when the proof is strong enough to sell.

  • Shakedown: acquire real listeners and preserve AdSense/search readiness.
  • COSMO Images: test licensing, prints, and curated packs with AI disclosure.
  • Home23: make the public repo legible enough for stars, installs, and service leads.
  • Verified operator work: sell bounded public-surface rescue with receipts.
Start with Shakedown See the repair case study