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Upload Markdown Files: A faster way to bring your content into HackMD
May 11, 2026ByChaseton CollinsRecent posts
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AI tools can draft PRDs, RFCs, and design rationale faster than teams can review them. Stoffel Labs and HashCloak founder Mikerah Quintyne-Collins shares the workflow her team uses to close that gap.How Stoffel Labs Uses HackMD as the Governance Layer for AI-Generated Docs
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AI agents are generating Markdown faster than humans can read it. Spec drafts, skill files, meeting notes, architecture docs; all produced in seconds, all demanding human judgment before they enter a source of truth. This post argues that the missing piece in modern AI stacks is not another agent, but a governance layer for what agents write.When Your AI Writes the Docs: A Governance Layer for Agent-Generated Markdown
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AI agents are reshaping how content is consumed on the web. HackMD is already Markdown-native, and now it is adding content negotiation via the HTTP Accept header so agents can request clean Markdown directly. Combined with the HackMD CLI and API, this makes HackMD a natural fit for agentic development workflows.Built for Agents: Markdown-Native Content Negotiation, CLI Workflows, and API integration
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Your HackMD notes don't have to live in a browser tab. The official VS Code extension lets you edit, sync, and organize your Markdown notes right alongside your code. This guide walks you through every step, from generating your API token to seeing your notes populate in the sidebar.How to Use the HackMD Extension: Enhancing your VSCode experience
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Markdown started as one developer's frustration with writing HTML by hand. Two decades later, it's everywhere, from README files to real-time collaboration platforms. This post traces how Markdown grew, why so many flavors exist, and why CommonMark matters for the future of collaborative writing.The History of Markdown: How Plain Text Took Over
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Technical teams now manage living docs, developer portals, and multi-channel content that feeds websites, APIs, and AI systems simultaneously. This guide compares Git-based, headless, and collaborative Markdown CMS options with honest tradeoffs.Choosing a CMS for Technical Teams in 2026: Git‑Based vs. Headless vs. Collaborative Markdown
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