xiReactor

A platform of pluggable AI cores. Brilliant is the first public core — live, open source, and in the community's hands. More on the way.

An AI-enriched bridge between the systems you already run

xiReactor started in summer 2025 as a centralized platform of pluggable AI cores — a way to bridge and enrich data between the tools teams already depend on. CRM to CRM. Ticketing to docs. ETL-style flows with an AI layer doing the messy parts that brittle field-mapping never could.

The frame is adjacent to Zapier, Make, and n8n, but reshaped around cores rather than nodes. Each core is a self-contained capability — a knowledge base, a CRM sync, an enrichment pipeline, a coding scaffold — that can be added, removed, enabled, or disabled per client. The platform is the substrate; the cores are what actually do the work.

That's the concept. Here's where it actually stands today.

Brilliant is the first public core. More are in the works.

The platform is built one core at a time. Other cores have been developed privately for specific client integrations and aren't public. Brilliant is the first to be released to the community — live, Apache 2.0, and in people's hands now. The knowledge-base problem — shared, governed context for AI agents — kept surfacing across conversations, so that's the piece that shipped first publicly.

Next on deck for public release:

For now, Brilliant is the public surface. Factory is next.

The first core that shipped

xiReactor Brilliant

A shared, governed knowledge base for teams running AI agents — institutional memory that people and agents read from and write to through the same interface.

  • Concurrent multi-agent access — many minds, one knowledge base.
  • Governed writes — auto-approve, auto-merge, AI review, human review. Nothing silently overwrites.
  • Typed links between entries — the graph answers structural questions directly.

Open source · Apache 2.0

Want to talk about the broader idea?

If you're here about Brilliant, the Brilliant page is the right place to start. To talk about the broader xiReactor concept — other cores, the platform idea, where it might still go — send a note.

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