ExtractWisdom
Content-adaptive wisdom extraction — detects what domains exist in content and builds custom sections (not static IDEAS/QUOTES). Produces tailored insight reports from videos, podcasts, articles. USE WHEN extract wisdom, analyze video, analyze podcast, extract insights, what's interesting, extract f
Install
mkdir -p .claude/skills/extractwisdom && curl -L -o skill.zip "https://agentskills.codes/api/skills/download/15016" && unzip -o skill.zip -d .claude/skills/extractwisdom && rm skill.zipInstalls to .claude/skills/extractwisdom
Activation
This is the description your AI agent reads to decide when to run this skill — the better it matches your request, the more reliably it fires.
Content-adaptive wisdom extraction — detects what domains exist in content and builds custom sections (not static IDEAS/QUOTES). Produces tailored insight reports from videos, podcasts, articles. USE WHEN extract wisdom, analyze video, analyze podcast, extract insights, what's interesting, extract from YouTube, what did I miss, key takeaways.About this skill
Customization
Before executing, check for user customizations at:
~/.claude/PAI/USER/SKILLCUSTOMIZATIONS/ExtractWisdom/
If this directory exists, load and apply any PREFERENCES.md, configurations, or resources found there. These override default behavior. If the directory does not exist, proceed with skill defaults.
ExtractWisdom — Dynamic Content Extraction
The next generation of extract_wisdom. Instead of static sections (IDEAS, QUOTES, HABITS...), this skill detects what wisdom domains actually exist in the content and builds custom sections around them.
A programming interview gets "Programming Philosophy" and "Developer Workflow Tips." A business podcast gets "Contrarian Business Takes" and "Money Philosophy." A security talk gets "Threat Model Insights" and "Defense Strategies." The sections adapt because the content dictates them.
When to Use
- Analyzing YouTube videos, podcasts, interviews, articles
- User says "extract wisdom", "what's interesting in this", "key takeaways"
- Processing any content where you want to capture the best stuff
- When standard extraction patterns miss the gems
Depth Levels
Extract at different depths depending on need. Default is Full if no level is specified.
| Level | Sections | Bullets/Section | Closing Sections | When |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Instant | 1 | 8 | None | Quick hit. One killer section. |
| Fast | 3 | 3 | None | Skim in 30 seconds. |
| Basic | 3 | 5 | One-Sentence Takeaway only | Solid overview without the deep cuts. |
| Full | 5-12 | 3-15 | All three | The default. Complete extraction. |
| Comprehensive | 10-15 | 8-15 | All three + Themes & Connections | Maximum depth. Nothing left behind. |
How to invoke: "extract wisdom (fast)" or "extract wisdom at comprehensive level" or just "extract wisdom" for Full.
Comprehensive extras:
- Themes & Connections closing section: identify 3-5 throughlines that connect multiple sections. Not summaries — the deeper patterns the speaker may not even realize they're revealing.
- Prioritize breadth. Every significant wisdom domain gets its own section.
- No merging sections to save space. If the content supports 15 sections, use 15.
All levels use the same voice, tone rules, and quality standards. The only thing that changes is structure. An Instant extraction should hit just as hard per-bullet as a Comprehensive one.
Workflow Routing
| Workflow | Trigger | File |
|---|---|---|
| Extract | "extract wisdom from", "analyze this", YouTube URL | Workflows/Extract.md |
The Core Idea
Old extract_wisdom: Static sections. Same headers every time. IDEAS. QUOTES. HABITS. FACTS.
This skill: Read the content first. Figure out what's actually in there. Build sections around what you find.
The output should feel like your smartest friend watched/read the thing and is telling you about it over coffee. Not a book report. Not documentation. A real person pointing out the parts that made them go "holy shit" or "wait, that's actually brilliant."
Tone Rules (CRITICAL)
Canonical voice reference: PAI/USER/WRITINGSTYLE.md — read this file for the full voice definition. The bullets should sound like {PRINCIPAL.NAME} telling a friend about it over coffee. Not compressed info nuggets. Not clever one-liners. Actual spoken observations.
THREE LEVELS — we're aiming for Level 3:
Level 1 (BAD — documentation):
- The speaker discussed the importance of self-modifying software in the context of agentic AI development
- It was noted that financial success has diminishing returns beyond a certain threshold
- The distinction between "vibe coding" and "agentic engineering" was emphasized as meaningful
Level 2 (BETTER — but still "smart bullet points"):
- He built self-modifying software basically by accident — just made the agent aware of its own source code
- Money has diminishing returns. A cheeseburger is a cheeseburger no matter how rich you are.
- "Vibe coding is a slur" — he calls it agentic engineering, and only does vibe coding after 3am
Level 3 (YES — this is what we want — conversational, {PRINCIPAL.NAME}'s voice):
- He wasn't trying to build self-modifying software. He just let the agent see its own source code and it started fixing itself.
- Past a certain point, money stops mattering. A cheeseburger is a cheeseburger no matter how rich you are.
- He calls vibe coding a slur. What he does is agentic engineering. The vibe coding only happens after 3am, and he regrets it in the morning.
The difference between Level 2 and 3: Level 2 is compressed info with em-dashes. Level 3 is how you'd actually SAY it. Varied sentence lengths. Letting a thought breathe. Not trying to be clever — just being clear and direct and a little bit personal.
Key signals of Level 3:
- Reads naturally when spoken aloud
- Varied sentence lengths — some short, some longer
- Understated — lets the content carry the weight
- Uses periods, not em-dashes, to let ideas land
- Feels opinionated ("Past a certain point, money stops mattering") not just informational
- The reader should think "I want to watch this" not "I got the summary"
Rules for Extracted Points
- Write like you'd say it. Read each bullet aloud. If it sounds like a press release or a compressed tweet, rewrite it. If it sounds like you telling a friend what you just watched, you nailed it.
- 8-16 words per sentence. This is the target range. Mix short (8-10) with medium (11-14) and longer (15-16). Don't make them all the same length. Exception: verbatim quotes can be any length since they're the speaker's actual words.
- Let ideas breathe. Use periods between thoughts, not em-dashes. Short sentences. Then a slightly longer one to explain. That's the rhythm.
- Include the actual detail. Not "he talked about money" but "a cheeseburger is a cheeseburger no matter how rich you are."
- Use the speaker's words when they're good. If they said something perfectly, use it.
- No hedging language. Not "it was suggested that" or "the speaker noted." Just say the thing.
- Capture what made you stop. Every bullet should be something worth telling someone about.
- Vary your openers. Don't start three bullets the same way. And don't front-load with "He" — if more than 3 bullets in a section start with the speaker's name, you're writing a biography.
- Capture the human moments. Burnout stories, moments of doubt, something that moved them. That's wisdom too. Don't skip it because it's not "technical."
- Insight over inventory. "He uses Go for CLIs" is inventory. "He picked a language he doesn't even like because the ecosystem fits agents perfectly. That's the new normal." is insight. Go deeper.
- Specificity is everything. "He was impressed by the agent" = bad. "The agent found ffmpeg, curled the Whisper API, and transcribed a voice message nobody taught it to handle" = good.
- Tension and surprise. The best bullets have a contradiction or reversal. "Every VC is offering hundreds of millions. He genuinely doesn't care." The gap between the offer and the indifference IS the wisdom.
- Understated, not clever. Let the content carry the weight. You don't need to manufacture drama or craft the perfect one-liner. Just state what's interesting plainly and move on.
How Dynamic Sections Work
Phase 1: Content Scan
Read/listen to the full content. As you go, notice what DOMAINS of wisdom are present. These aren't the topics discussed — they're the TYPES of insight being delivered.
Examples of wisdom domains (these are illustrative, not exhaustive):
- Programming Philosophy (how to think about code, not specific syntax)
- Developer Workflow (practical tips for how to work)
- Business/Money Philosophy (unconventional takes on money, success, building companies)
- Human Psychology (insights about how people think, behave, learn)
- Technology Predictions (where things are headed)
- Life Philosophy (how to live, what matters)
- Contrarian Takes (things that go against conventional wisdom)
- First-Time Revelations (things you're hearing for the first time — genuinely new)
- Technical Architecture (how something is built, design decisions)
- Leadership & Team Dynamics (managing people, working with others)
- Creative Process (how to make things, craft, art)
Phase 2: Section Selection
Pick sections based on depth level (default Full = 5-12). Requirements:
- Section count follows depth level table. Full = 5-12, Comprehensive = 10-15, Basic/Fast = 3, Instant = 1.
- Each section must have at least 3 STRONG bullets to justify existing (except Fast, where 3 tight bullets IS the section). If you can only scrape together 2 weak ones, merge into a related section.
- Always include "Quotes That Hit Different" if the content has good ones
- Always include "First-Time Revelations" if there are genuinely new ideas — things you literally didn't know before
- Section names should be conversational, not academic. "Money Philosophy" not "Financial Considerations"
- Sections should be SPECIFIC to this content. Generic sections = failure.
- Kill inventory sections. If a section is just a list of facts ("uses X for Y, uses A for B"), it's not wisdom. Either go deeper on WHY those choices matter or merge the facts into a section about the underlying philosophy.
- Don't split what belongs together. If "burnout recovery" and "money philosophy" are actually both about "what success really means," make one richer section instead of two thin ones.
- Name sections like a magazine editor. "The Death of 80% of Apps" is great. "Technology Predictions" is not. The section name itself should make you curious. It's a headline, not a category.
- Surprise density per section. If a section has 6+ bullets but only 2 are genuinely surprising, kill the padding and keep the winners. Quality > quanti
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