Show HN: Sx 2.0 – Share AI skills with your team through a Dropbox folder Sx 2.0, a desktop app for sharing AI skills via synced folders like Dropbox, launched to let non-technical teams distribute skills without using git or the command line. The app translates skills into formats for AI clients such as Claude Code and Cursor, enabling one-click installation from shared folders. Your Dropbox is now a skill server sx 2.0 is out: a native app for Mac, Windows, and Linux that lets anyone share AI skills with their team, no git and no terminal required. A few months ago I wrote that there’s an npm-shaped hole in the AI tooling stack /2026/06/05/a-package-manager-for-ai-assets.html . Your best AI users build up skills, MCP configs, and commands that multiply their output, and that knowledge stays trapped on their machines because there’s no clean way to distribute it. We built sx, an open source package manager for AI assets, to fill that hole. It worked. Developers use it to version skills in git vaults and install them across Claude Code, Cursor, Copilot, Codex, Gemini, Cline, and Kiro with a lock file and deterministic installs. Then I made a mistake I should have seen coming, because I’ve watched Atlassian make it twice. I built the sharing layer for developers and assumed everyone else would eventually meet us at the command line. They won’t. In the sixty or so discovery interviews we’ve run this year, the people getting the most out of skills are increasingly in marketing, legal, sales, and ops. They write great skills. They have no git, no terminal, and no interest in acquiring either. Asking a marketing team to sx init --type git is asking them to not share skills. sx 2.0 is the fix. It’s a real desktop app, and the distribution model it leans on is one every team already has: a shared folder. A shared Dropbox folder is the whole backend Here’s the workflow for a non-technical team. You open the app, point your library at a folder in Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, or iCloud, and drag your skills in. Markdown goes in, skills come out. Your teammates point the app at the same folder and everything you publish shows up for them. There’s no server and no accounts. The file sync product your company already pays for does the replication. This works because of the other big change in 2.0: vault format v2. The latest version of every asset now lives directly on disk at assets/