If you’ve ever waited 12 seconds for a git clone of a 5GB monorepo behind a corporate firewall, you know the cost of poor Git server performance: $47k annual productivity loss for a 50-person engineering team, per our 2024 internal benchmark. For 15 years, I’ve tuned Git infrastructure for teams from 4-person startups to 10k+ engineer orgs, and the debate between lightweight Gitea and feature-heav
The previous three posts covered how events flow from the SDK to the UI, how the timeline renders, and how tool cards visualize. This final post looks at SwiftWork's infrastructure — how data is stored, how state is restored, how Markdown is rendered, how code is highlighted, and how API keys are managed. These components are independent, but all essential to making the app usable. SwiftWork uses
Across the previous seven articles plus a bonus chapter, we thoroughly explored the inner workings of Open Agent SDK — Agent Loop, the tool system, MCP integration, multi-Agent collaboration, conversation persistence, and multi-LLM support. The bonus chapter even embedded the SDK into a macOS native app, Motive, and ran it live. But Motive was just a backend-swap experiment. The real question is: