Claude Code skills are powerful, but ninety‑five percent of people will never open a terminal to try one. Skillet is a curated kitchen — one good skill at a time, on the open web, with no install and no signup.
When you click start, Skillet spins up a real Claude Agent SDK instance on Anthropic’s Managed Agents service — the same runtime that powers Claude Code in your terminal — with whichever skills you’ve installed loaded into it (in this example, gstack’s /office-hours). The browser is just the window into it.
The actual skill, not a copy. The exact /office-hours skill from gstack is loaded into the agent. If Garry updates it, Skillet sessions update too.
The agent has real tools. Same read / write / structure primitives Claude Code uses locally — the skill drives the conversation, calls tools, and writes your artifact as it goes.
Anthropic runs the compute. Managed Agents handles the runtime, scale, and isolation. Skillet routes the session and renders the result.
Every skill is its own workflow with its own structure and its own deliverable. 2 are live now. More will land here over time.
For two decades, the most valuable twenty minutes in Y Combinator was a session with a YC partner — a structured conversation that turned vague ideas into clear plans. Garry packaged that format as a skill in gstack. Skillet runs the same skill, in your browser.
Talk through what you're building. Walk away with a written artifact.
Bring a home project, trip, study goal, event, research thread, operations workflow, or software idea. CE Plan turns it into a practical action plan with steps, constraints, contingencies, and sources when current facts matter.
One more skill on the way.