Private Telegram AI agents, live in under a minute
DeployHermes lets you launch your own private, always-on Hermes agent for Telegram without touching Docker, servers, or Fly.io. Bring your own model keys, connect your bot, and get a live agent with persistent memory in under a minute.
DeployHermes lets you spin up your own private, always-on Hermes agent for Telegram/Discord in under a minute. We built it because getting Hermes live today still means dealing with servers, Docker, Fly.io, environment variables, and a lot of setup friction before you ever get to the fun part: actually using your agent. That works for technical users, but it blocks a much bigger group of people who just want their own agent running reliably.
With DeployHermes, you bring your own model keys, connect your Telegram bot, and launch a dedicated Hermes runtime with persistent memory and encrypted secrets. The goal is simple: your agent should feel personal and always available, without you needing to operate infrastructure.
We’re starting with Telegram as the launch wedge, and we’re offering a 3-day free trial with 25% off so people can try it with real workflows before committing. Use code PHLAUNCH25 during checkout.
Would love feedback on two things in particular: 1. What would you want your personal Telegram agent to help with first? 2. What made self-hosting feel too annoying or too fragile for you?
About Deploy Hermes on Product Hunt
“Private Telegram AI agents, live in under a minute”
Deploy Hermes launched on Product Hunt on April 6th, 2026 and earned 112 upvotes and 11 comments, placing #10 on the daily leaderboard. DeployHermes lets you launch your own private, always-on Hermes agent for Telegram without touching Docker, servers, or Fly.io. Bring your own model keys, connect your bot, and get a live agent with persistent memory in under a minute.
On the analytics side, Deploy Hermes competes within Productivity, Developer Tools and Artificial Intelligence — topics that collectively have 1.6M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how Deploy Hermes performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted Deploy Hermes?
Deploy Hermes was hunted by Akshay Maurya. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of Deploy Hermes including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.
Hey Product Hunt! 👋
DeployHermes lets you spin up your own private, always-on Hermes agent for Telegram/Discord in under a minute.
We built it because getting Hermes live today still means dealing with servers, Docker, Fly.io, environment variables, and a lot of setup friction before you ever get to the fun part: actually using your agent. That works for technical users, but it blocks a much bigger group of people who just want their own agent running reliably.
With DeployHermes, you bring your own model keys, connect your Telegram bot, and launch a dedicated Hermes runtime with persistent memory and encrypted secrets. The goal is simple: your agent should feel personal and always available, without you needing to operate infrastructure.
We’re starting with Telegram as the launch wedge, and we’re offering a 3-day free trial with 25% off so people can try it with real workflows before committing. Use code PHLAUNCH25 during checkout.
We have planned several new features and you can check them out here - https://deploy-hermes.com/roadmap
Would love feedback on two things in particular:
1. What would you want your personal Telegram agent to help with first?
2. What made self-hosting feel too annoying or too fragile for you?