We're all learning how to ship more side projects. If you're "in the bubble" it can feel like everyone is repo-maxxing. Shipping weekly. Spinning up agents to scaffold full apps overnight. New OSS dropped every Friday. The reality I see with most developers is much more normal: They have six or seven repos sitting in various states of half-attention. A side project from last year that still gets a
Hey dev.to community! I just launched CodeLens AI — an AI-powered code review tool that automatically reviews every pull request. Connect your GitHub repo Open a PR AI automatically reviews the code Detailed review comment posted on PR Bugs and logic errors SQL injection and security vulnerabilities Performance issues Code quality improvements Next.js + TypeScript NextAuth + GitHub OAuth Supabase
Why We Open-Sourced Our AI Safety Layer When we built the AI safety layer for As You Wish (AYW), we faced a choice: keep it proprietary or open-source it to help the community. Here's why we chose the latter (and why it made our platform stronger). If you're building AI-assisted development tools, you need: Input validation (sanitizing prompts, preventing injection) Output filtering (catching u
If you want to Automate GitHub PRs, the real goal is not just adding another bot comment to a pull request. The goal is to give reviewers the context they usually have to gather manually: who owns the service, whether it is deployed, whether basic repository standards are in place, and whether the change looks safe to merge. A useful AI pull request workflow can do exactly that. When a PR opens, i
This article is an AI-assisted translation of a Japanese technical article. In April 2026, Amazon Bedrock AgentCore added a new capability called Optimization, which takes real agent traces and proposes prompt improvements based on them. https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2026/05/bedrock-agentcore-optimization-preview/ In this article, I apply AgentCore Optimization to a Strands Agents-as-
DynamoDB Global Tables replicate data across regions in seconds, but replication is still asynchronous. That means a simple read from a replica region can occasionally return stale data, which is acceptable in most application as the user doesn’t require the latest available data all the time, but in some systems, stale reads can break important processes and stability of a platform. So the questi
Most AWS security setups focus heavily on inbound traffic. But outbound is often left open. Security Groups. NACLs. Maybe WAF. But outbound traffic often gets far less attention — and that’s where problems begin. Every outbound request starts with a DNS query. Before your application connects anywhere, it first resolves a domain name. That step is easy to ignore, but it’s where a lot of risk begin
TL;DR: I built the same browser agent twice — once with 500 lines of Python, once with 7 lines of JSON. The second one took 5 minutes. The agent harness layer is becoming the real competitive advantage, not the model. Last month, I built a browser automation agent. Playwright. Custom orchestration. Login handlers. Error retries. Session management. React-aware form filling. Anti-detection scripts.