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
AI. It's the buzzword on everyone's lips, the technology promising to revolutionize… well, everything. And, predictably, it's met with a healthy dose of skepticism, if not outright disdain. "It's unreliable," some say. "It hallucinates," others lament. "It's a crutch for those who don't understand the real work." Sound familiar? It should. Because this isn't the first time humanity has grappled wi
Opinion: We Ditched All Third-Party Mobile SDKs – Cut App Startup Time by 30% for iOS 18 When iOS 18 launched, our team braced for the usual post-release performance tweaks. Instead, we hit a wall: our flagship app’s cold startup time had crept up to 2.8 seconds, well above Apple’s recommended 1.5-second threshold for optimal user retention. After months of debugging, we made a radical call: rem