Config is the same across clients — only the file and path differ.
{
"mcpServers": {
"interview-mode": {
"args": [
"-y",
"claude-interview-mode"
],
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx"
}
}
}Are you the author?
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An MCP server that turns Claude into a structured interviewer — and gets smarter with every conversation. Each interview feeds a shared evolution system where checkpoints are scored, ranked, and recommended based on real usage patterns across all users.
Run this in your terminal to verify the server starts. Then let us know if it worked — your result helps other developers.
npx -y 'claude-interview-mode' 2>&1 | head -1 && echo "✓ Server started successfully"
After testing, let us know if it worked:
Five weighted categories — click any category to see the underlying evidence.
No known CVEs.
Checked claude-interview-mode against OSV.dev.
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An MCP server that turns Claude into a structured interviewer — and gets smarter with every conversation. Each interview feeds a shared evolution system where checkpoints are scored, ranked, and recommended based on real usage patterns across all users.
This isn't just an interview tool. It's a collectively evolving knowledge system.
Every time anyone runs an interview in a category (e.g., "saas-pricing"), the system learns:
Session 1: You explore freely → decisions become new checkpoints
Session 2: Checkpoints load → Claude prioritizes what matters
Session 5: Bayesian scores stabilize → the interview path optimizes itself
Session 20: Community patterns emerge → everyone benefits from collective experience
1. Checkpoint Discovery — When a decision is made during an interview, its topic is automatically registered as a new checkpoint. After just a few sessions, the system knows what topics matter for each category.
2. Bayesian Scoring — Each checkpoint tracks how often it's covered and how often it leads to a decision. The score uses Bayesian smoothing to handle sparse data:
decision_rate = (decisions + 0.6) / (times_covered + 2)
The prior (0.6/2 = 30% base rate) ensures new checkpoints start with a reasonable score. After ~5 sessions, real data dominates.
3. Composite Ranking — Checkpoints are ranked by a composite score combining decision-leading effectiveness (70%) and usage frequency (30%):
composite = decision_rate × 0.7 + normalized_usage × 0.3
High-scoring checkpoints are the ones that consistently lead to concrete decisions — not just topics that get discussed.
4. Recommended Path — The system computes an optimal interview path: checkpoints with decision_rate > 0.2, sorted by their average position in past sessions. This tells Claude not just what to ask, but when to ask it.
5. Community Evolution — All metadata flows to a shared database. When you interview about "api-design", you benefit from every other user who interviewed about "api-design" before you. The checkpoints, scores, and paths evolve collectively.
| Shared (metadata only) | Never shared |
|---|---|
| Category names (e.g., "saas-pricing") | Your actual questions and answers |
| Checkpoint names (e.g., "pricing-model") | Decision details and reasoning |
| Usage counts, scores, positions | Any personal or project-specific content |
npx claude-interview-mode
Or install globally:
npm install -g claude-interview-mode
Add to your project's .mcp.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"interview-mode": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "claude-interview-mode"]
}
}
}
Restart your Claude Code session to load the MCP server. That's it — the evolution system starts working immediately via a shared community database.
By default, checkpoint data is stored in a shared community Supabase instance. If you want your own private database:
{
"mcpServers": {
"interview-mode": {
"type": "stdio",
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "claude-interview-mode"],
"env": {
"SUPABASE_URL": "
... [View full README on GitHub](https://github.com/teabagkim/claude-interview-mode#readme)