Most TypeScript teams shopping for an agent framework don't need one. A single generateObject call covers classification, extraction, summarization, tagging — the 80% case for production LLM work in TS right now. But once the model starts deciding what to do next, surviving deploys, or coordinating with other agents, you start shopping. And the moment you do, you discover the TS agent ecosystem is
All frameworks are eventually replaced. React is probably the first that won’t be. It's not the best language out there, it's not the language developers love the most, it's the language the robots just won't quit. Request ChatGPT to develop a todo app for you. You'll receive React. Request Copilot to generate the basic structure of a component. React. Request Claude to design a prototype for a da
An SSG benchmark across five React frameworks, from one thousand You're building a marketplace. Or a documentation site. A wiki, Five minutes. Ten. Twenty. Maybe an hour. Maybe a stack trace. You don't know in advance — and the public benchmarks won't tell So I built a benchmark for the gap. Five frameworks in a pnpm workspace, each rendering one dynamic /posts/[id] from a shared deterministic d