Robin van Veen
Amsterdam · est. 2018

Four ways to work with me on AI agents that actually ship.

I'm Robin. I run a one-person company that ships software at the rate of a small team — the leverage comes from a fleet of AI agents I run myself. Every Tuesday I write a long-form essay about what's working, and nine thousand builders read it. Reach across socials is over a million; agents shipped is north of thirty-five. The four things below are the only ways we work together.

9,000+ builders. One email a week. Unsubscribe in one click.
— THE FOUR WAYS
  1. 01

    The Tuesday newsletter

    One long-form essay every week on building AI agents that actually ship in production. Frameworks, war stories, code, the occasional rant. Sourced from a fleet I run myself. Free.

    For builders & founders
  2. 02

    Talks & workshops

    Keynotes, panels and hands-on workshops on AI agents, automation strategy, and the solo-operator model for tech-driven businesses. Booked one quarter ahead.

    For conferences & teams
  3. 03

    1-on-1 advisory

    A handful of slots per quarter. Hands-on engagements to help you architect, build and deploy AI agents inside your own business. Either advisory hours or full co-build.

    For founders & operators
  4. 04

    Sponsorships & partnerships

    Selective partnerships with AI tools and platforms I genuinely use. Newsletter mentions, deep product breakdowns, joint workshops, custom formats — never an ad placement.

    For AI companies
Portrait of Robin van Veen

— ABOUT

I started writing about AI in 2018, before agents were a thing. Today I run No Hands Studio, an AI-powered web design agency, and cortextOS, an open operating system for long-running agents. Both are built and operated by an autonomous fleet I designed myself — humans only step in where judgement matters.

Most AI commentary today is about model capabilities. Mine is about systems: how to compose agents into a workflow that survives a real production load, and how to keep a long-running fleet healthy at three in the morning. That's where the real work is, and that's what the newsletter is for.