Hi Frontier-CS team,
First of all, thank you for creating such a fantastic project. I’ve been following the blog posts on the Frontier-CS website and found them extremely insightful, especially topics related to evaluation architecture, open-ended CS problems, and evolving agent systems.
However, I noticed that there is currently no official RSS feed or X (Twitter) account for subscribing to updates. For readers who rely on RSS readers or social feeds to keep track of research progress, this makes it harder to stay informed about new posts.
Would it be possible to provide one or more of the following?
Suggested options
- An RSS/Atom feed for blog posts (e.g. /feed.xml)
- An official X (Twitter) account announcing new articles
- GitHub Discussions or Releases notifications for blog updates
- Email newsletter signup option
RSS feeds are especially helpful for researchers and engineers who integrate technical blogs into their daily reading workflows.
Thanks again for the great work on Frontier-CS — it’s exciting to see benchmarks pushing toward more realistic and open-ended computer science challenges.
Best regards
Hi Frontier-CS team,
First of all, thank you for creating such a fantastic project. I’ve been following the blog posts on the Frontier-CS website and found them extremely insightful, especially topics related to evaluation architecture, open-ended CS problems, and evolving agent systems.
However, I noticed that there is currently no official RSS feed or X (Twitter) account for subscribing to updates. For readers who rely on RSS readers or social feeds to keep track of research progress, this makes it harder to stay informed about new posts.
Would it be possible to provide one or more of the following?
Suggested options
RSS feeds are especially helpful for researchers and engineers who integrate technical blogs into their daily reading workflows.
Thanks again for the great work on Frontier-CS — it’s exciting to see benchmarks pushing toward more realistic and open-ended computer science challenges.
Best regards