π οΈ All DevTools
Showing 1–20 of 6114 tools
Last Updated
July 19, 2026 at 08:00 PM
AstrBotDevs/AstrBot
GitHub Trending[Other] AI Agent Assistant & development framework that integrates lots of IM platforms, LLMs, plugins and AI feature, and can be your openclaw alternative. β¨
kvcache-ai/ktransformers
GitHub Trending[Other] A Flexible Framework for Experiencing Heterogeneous LLM Inference/Fine-tune Optimizations
Claude Code uses Bun written in Rust now
Hacker News (score: 99)[Other] Claude Code uses Bun written in Rust now
Show HN: Shikigami, run AI coding agents in parallel, each in a Git worktree
Show HN (score: 5)[IDE/Editor] Show HN: Shikigami, run AI coding agents in parallel, each in a Git worktree Hello all,<p>I'm a software developer. Over the last few months more and more of my work has turned into using coding agents instead of typing the whole code myself. Usually a few claude sessions at once, sometimes codex, one per feature or per revealed bug.<p>I ran them in a split terminal for a few weeks, and quickly spotted two main problems. The first is that I couldn't easily tell which agent was stuck waiting on me and which was still working, so I'd cycle through sessions and checking on them.<p>The second one: agents sharing a single branch step on each other. Two of them could be editing the same file with different ideas - a nice recipe for a mess.<p>So I built my own solution - Shikigami. It's a desktop app that runs agents side by side, each one in its own git worktree. Same repository, separate working directories, so they can all run at once without touching each other's edits. Every agent has a real PTY session.<p>The sessions are resumable too, you can quit the app, come back tomorrow, and a long conversation is where you left it.<p>The app has a second mode: a Monaco editor with the full file tree, diff viewer, git history and per-line blame. You flip between the agent grid and the editor from a pill in the middle of the title bar, and the agents keep running while you read. When one finishes a turn or needs input, a desktop notification takes you straight to that session.<p>There's language intelligence built in too: diagnostics, go-to-definition, find-references and completion for PHP 8.1-8.5 and TypeScript/JavaScript - both are still improving to provide better dx.<p>My mostly used stack at work is a Symfony app and docker containers, so the app has a docker integration builtin (service tree, per-service logs, a container shell, start/stop).<p>Another integration is mysql and redis support - databases/tables preview, custom sql queries and redis keys inspection.<p>It's free. You don't need an account, no sign-up and no cloud, so agents and worktrees stay on your machine. macOS (signed .dmg, Apple Silicon and Intel) and Linux (AppImage). No Windows build yet.<p>What you see today stays free. At some point I'd like to earn something from it, probably paid add-ons on top, or an option to support the project like Signal does. I haven't decided yet.<p>The source is private for now, so if that's a dealbreaker, fair enough - I understand that. That's why I started a dedicated YouTube channel so you can see who are you dealing with.<p>The app is still in the BETA phase, you can expect bugs, but I fix them fast. I have live streams on YT, and there's a discord server if you'd rather complain in real time.<p>I'd appreciate feedback, especially from anyone running more than two or three agents at once.<p>Thanks, Igor
Anthropic runs large-scale code migrations with Claude Code
Hacker News (score: 17)[Other] Anthropic runs large-scale code migrations with Claude Code
Mirror your GitHub repos to tangled.org automatically
Hacker News (score: 11)[Other] Mirror your GitHub repos to tangled.org automatically
OpenAI reduces Codex Model Context Size from 372k to 272k
Hacker News (score: 46)[Other] OpenAI reduces Codex Model Context Size from 372k to 272k
IceCream β Never use print() to debug again
Hacker News (score: 19)[Other] IceCream β Never use print() to debug again
Typing Speed Test, but for Developers
Hacker News (score: 77)[Other] Typing Speed Test, but for Developers
Setting up your spare Mac for Claude Code to control, a step-by-step guide
Hacker News (score: 108)[Other] Setting up your spare Mac for Claude Code to control, a step-by-step guide
Show HN: Q3Edit β Edit and play Quake 3 maps in the browser
Hacker News (score: 35)[Other] Show HN: Q3Edit β Edit and play Quake 3 maps in the browser I've been building a level editor for Quake 3 that runs entirely in the browser: Radiant-style layout, brush and patch editing, CSG, terrain sculpting, and entity editing. It opens and saves .map file and you can play the maps you build directly in the browser using a webassembly build of ioquake3.
Show HN: iMessage is the best interface, so I built TypeScript SDK for it
Show HN (score: 5)[API/SDK] Show HN: iMessage is the best interface, so I built TypeScript SDK for it I was building my personal agent, but I had to use Telegram, as it was the easiest platform to integrate. I wanted to build the harness and agent, not the infrastructure around these two, yet my UX was struggling. I stick to iMessage, and then I had to use another app to interact with my agent...<p>So I spent a weekend on building a TypeScript SDK, that unifies how to interact with different iMessage providers (as there is no official way to use iMessage), so you can play around with them, without having to commit to one, nor with a need to rewrite half of the codebase to change the integration.<p>It's open-source, you can check the repo here: <a href="https://imessage-sdk.dev/" rel="nofollow">https://imessage-sdk.dev/</a>
KnockOutEZ/wigolo
GitHub Trending[Other] The go-to web for your AI coding agent β local-first search, fetch, crawl & research over MCP. No API keys, no cloud, $0/query. Public beta.
Moonstone: Modern, cross-platform Lua runtime and package manager written in Zig
Hacker News (score: 19)[Package Manager] Moonstone: Modern, cross-platform Lua runtime and package manager written in Zig
Stenchill: 3D Printable Solder Paste Stencil Generator
Hacker News (score: 40)[Other] Stenchill: 3D Printable Solder Paste Stencil Generator
Topcoat: The full full-stack framework for Rust
Hacker News (score: 22)[Other] Topcoat: The full full-stack framework for Rust
Show HN: Fluent, tiny lang for reactivity and autograd
Show HN (score: 6)[Other] Show HN: Fluent, tiny lang for reactivity and autograd After six months of work, I am here again presenting Fluent β a tiny lang which is optimized for differentiable & reactive programming.<p>Since I am not Conal Elliot, don't expect a beautiful theoretical unification of FRP and AD from first principles. Rather, a horrific monster that holds together mostly because a lot of duct-tape.<p>The link points to the semi-interactive tour of the language, which will get the job done much better than I could in here.<p>Hope you hate/like it!
[DevOps] Show HN: Docket (system for active note-taking) now self-hosted after HN asked 6 months ago [0] I did a Show HN for Docket - itβs a system for active note taking in regular meetings like 1-1s, stands, all-hands, etc. On that thread a few of you asked for a self-hosted version. So I built it.<p>There's a free tier available. I put loads of effort into making setup easy - just one install command that gives you a CLI for start/stop/upgrade commands etc.<p>It runs as a single container, you can use a custom domain out the box for hosting over the internet (it provisions a LetsEncrypt cert for you), or just run locally (then via tailscale or whatever else if you want private networking). Single-player mode for private note-taking is indeed a much-encouraged usecase and is unlimited within the free tier.<p>This release also includes other big improvements requested in feedback last time (in both the self hosted and cloud versions): Export of notes; editor formatting more intuitive; easier to manage your actions.<p>Next on the roadmap is native clients, but honestly the mobile web experience is already quite usable. I use it all the time on my phone!<p>Give it a go, and let me know what you think :-) Any help needed with setup or anything else really, contact details are in my profile.<p>[0] <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46198430">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46198430</a>
Show HN: A zoomable timeline of 4M Wikipedia events
Hacker News (score: 65)[Other] Show HN: A zoomable timeline of 4M Wikipedia events I'm building a journal app in Kotlin Multiplatform and for this purpose I have created a zoomable timeline interface.<p>This is a side-project where I reuse the timeline interface to display 4 million events imported from Wikipedia / Wikidata, scored using PageRank. There is more information on the about page.<p>If you're interested in the stack: I use Kotlin Multiplatform extensively, with Compose Multiplatform for the UI, communicates with the backend using Kotlinx-RPC and behind the hood a simple Postgres database on a Hetzner machine.