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There's a meta facet to this, demonstrating that one can do something in AI, and also a gimmick to get more attention to one's resume.

Separate from the meta, and discussing only face value, the `candidate-info://website-text` has a bit of marketing puffery like we don't usually see on resumes. I'm wondering whether that's intended to influence the AI tool behavior.

As a simpler solution for many tech workers to get their info out there and easily AI-accessible, what about a plain static XML file Semantic Web-like markup of the pertinent resume information, in terms of some standard ontology. Which information you declare to be true. And then "AI" and other tools works from that? It could be under a `/.well-known/` URL, and anywhere else you can put or interchange an XML file.



> the `candidate-info://website-text` has a bit of marketing puffery like we don't usually see on resumes. I'm wondering whether that's intended to influence the AI tool behavior.

I actually wrote the marketing for the humans. That site predates this ai native resume. My thinking is that by putting a little sell into my site I can show off another aspect of my skillset. I used to have a standard bio site with a portfolio but it was a wall of text and needed a refresher.

> As a simpler solution

llms.txt seems to work pretty well. I am sure there are ways to increase the quality of an llms.txt but I started by simply joining all the text data I already had together and asking an llm to make an llms.txt out of it. From there I've been "manually" editing it. Often with Claude's help.

> It could be under a `/.well-known/` URL

I am hoping we start to see a lot more use of this. We already have a pretty good set of tools to do discovery so let's use them.




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