We Rewrote Our Angular 18 App in React 20 and Increased Developer Velocity by 40% Last quarter, our engineering team made the bold call to rewrite our 3-year-old Angular 18 production application in React 20. After 6 months of development, we cut over to the new stack with zero downtime, and the results have exceeded our expectations: we’ve measured a 40% increase in developer velocity, alongsid
White labeling is more common than you might think. When developing software, you often need to deploy the same application for multiple clients, each requiring their own customization: unique color palettes, logos, or specific variants for a link. Without a proper strategy, you might be tempted to simply clone the existing repository and implement client-specific changes on demand. However, this
In the gold rush of Artificial Intelligence, developers often obsess over model parameters, token limits, and inference speeds. But in the Apple ecosystem, a groundbreaking AI model is only as good as the interface that houses it. If your app delivers world-changing insights but hides them behind a keyboard or makes them invisible to VoiceOver users, it isn't a "smart" app—it’s a broken one. Build
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
Post 0 painted the full picture: AsyncStream<SDKMessage> → AgentBridge → EventMapper → SwiftUI. This post breaks open the two middle layers: AgentBridge and EventMapper, to see how they transform the SDK's message stream into an event list that SwiftUI can consume directly. Let's start with the conclusion: AgentBridge is the single most complex file in the entire app. It does five things at once:
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:
Imagine an AI chatbot that forgets everything the moment you close the app. Every interaction starts from scratch, every preference is lost, and the "intelligence" feels fleeting. For modern AI applications, persistence isn't just a convenience—it’s a fundamental requirement. To build a truly robust AI agent, you need to provide it with a "long-term memory." SwiftData, Apple’s modern persistence f