Many users see AI skill proliferation and resulting "skill hell" as temporary early noise that will yield useful abilities like past ecosystems, while others highlight risks such as hallucinations and security issues from injected skills.
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@svpino At least finding jQuery didn't require mastering the 'Finding jQuery' skill first. Peak problem-solving.

@svpino Some are actually useful though https://github.com/majidmanzarpour/threejs-game-skills
We are in skill hell.
We already need skills to discover other skills.
2020: Yet Another JavaScript Library. 2026: Yet Another Skill.

@svpino Many would give up in this period... Those who won't would become unimaginably skilled by the time the market heals again... And the crowd would thin down by then too...

@svpino True, but it happened basically instantly. Week 3 after they were launched.

@svpino I feel the pain, what is the solution? It gets worse when you have repo/team skills being injected

@svpino Isn’t that just an index?

@svpino There are skills which fill your context and makes the LLM more hallucinatory than ever, skills that executes arbitrary commands on your system and exfiltrate data to unknown sources 😄

@svpino Lol i was telling my friend same thing today, to get rich sell skill 😂

@svpino might be wrong but JS hell was 15 libs doing the same thing. the 'skills to discover skills' bit sounds more like a search problem than a redundancy one. are people actually building duplicate skills, or just nobody knows what already exists?

@svpino Skill hell is just early ecosystem noise.
JS libraries went through this exact phase before npm search and GitHub stars became reliable enough signal.

@svpino Its a skill issue, literally.

@svpino 🤣

@svpino the evaluation cost gets worse at smaller scale. spend a week picking a framework, that's a week the team isn't shipping.

@svpino every abstraction layer eventually grows a discovery layer on top of it, then that needs its own index. we never escape the meta, we just rename it every five years

@praveenkoka @svpino Wont surprise me if 50%+ of the small websites still use jquery. With a webapp you want spa nowadays for which are more suitable options