L'IA vocale en gestion de chantier : retour d'expérience après 50 projets BTP Le problème : les mains pleines, le temps compté Sur un chantier, le chef de projet ou l'artisan a les mains occupées. Qu'il soit en train de mesurer une façade, de vérifier l'aplomb d'une cloison ou de valider du béton fraîchement coulé, la dernière chose dont il a besoin est de sortir son téléphone pour re
Voice AI for Jobsite Estimating: A Developer Perspective Building estimators spend hours hunched over spreadsheets, struggling with poor handwriting on site photos, and entering the same data twice (once on paper, once in the office). This workflow is broken. Voice AI changes everything—and it's simpler to implement than most developers think. In this article, I'll walk you through the real-worl
Voice AI for Jobsite Estimating: A Developer Perspective The construction industry has historically lagged behind in digital adoption. Yet today, one of the most transformative shifts happening on job sites isn't coming from enterprise software vendors—it's coming from applied AI at the edge. Voice-based estimating is reshaping how builders create quotes, manage materials, and streamline workflo
The previous two posts covered how events flow from the SDK to the UI. This post focuses on visualizing one specific type of event: tool calls. Tool invocations are the most frequent operations in an Agent application. A typical task might call tools twenty or thirty times—reading files, writing files, executing commands, searching code. If every tool call renders as the same gray block, it's hard
Post 1 covered how AgentBridge converts the SDK's AsyncStream<SDKMessage> into [AgentEvent]. This post looks at what [AgentEvent] becomes — how TimelineView renders 18 event types, handles scroll behavior, and stays smooth when the event count gets large. TimelineView is the main body of the workspace, filling all the space between the sidebar and the input box. Its view hierarchy is shallow: Time