hi, i'm koshik. i kept hitting the same wall: no resume, linkedin, or twitter bio could actually tell my whole story — to a person, or to the agents now reading on their behalf. so i built logr: log every event once, for both.
the story a resume can't tell. read by humans, ingested by agents.
a resume, a linkedin, a twitter bio — none of them hold your whole story, and none speak to the agents now reading on someone's behalf. log every event once. logr makes it a timeline humans read, an llm.txt agents ingest, and a /ask endpoint any agent can query. one log. every reader.
you log it once. humans read your story. agents read your context. the same entry, both ways at once.
shipped to the first 50. front page by the next morning.
no wizard, no profile to polish. log a sentence, hit save, walk away.
your handle is your address. logr.life/koshik — the page, the llm.txt, the ask-anything chat. one handle, one life.
a date and a sentence. that's the whole format. add a link or a photo if you want. or paste your story — a resume, a url — and ai drafts the events for you to review.
your timeline updates. your llm.txt regenerates. and your chat answers visitors with the new entry — grounded in your log, nothing else.
now: building sage 2026.05 started logr 2026.04 sage on solana 2026.02 won zhentan
one entry a year. one a week. one on a tuesday because the bread was good. a life is never done. logr is never sealed.
koshik's been keeping his since 2014, retroactively. start today, go back as far as you remember.
a builder. in crypto since 2018, in security since before that. mostly: a quiet bet that this would matter.
read the full log →one log for the humans who know you and the agents that don't.
an ai co-signer for wallets, live on mainnet from day one.
spoke on on-chain identity in buenos aires.
a small r&d lab for blockchain infrastructure.
computer & information systems security.
it takes about ninety seconds to write the first one. the next one waits until you have something to say.
free forever for personal logs · early access · ninety seconds to the first entry