AI agent stack
An AI agent stack for building, testing, and shipping agents with tools, memory, browser actions, and evals without turning the setup into a huge mess.
Real-world multi-tool setups built by the community — searchable, saveable, remixable.
An AI agent stack for building, testing, and shipping agents with tools, memory, browser actions, and evals without turning the setup into a huge mess.
A practical internship stack for finding openings, tracking every application, showing your projects, staying on top of outreach, and making it easy for recruiters or alumni to book time with you.
A simple job search stack that helps you find openings, track every application, show your work, network better, and make it easy for recruiters to book time with you.
Launch a micro-SaaS with help from a stack of tools. Launch quick, collect feedback, and send updates to users automatically. Users get a premium experience for less trouble on your end.
What I use to get through a literature review without drowning in PDFs. Find the relevant papers, understand the landscape, then write something that holds up.
We have twelve retainer clients and one person doing reporting. This is the stack that makes monthly reports something we finish in a day instead of a week.
This is the stack for teams who are past demos and now need to see what their agents are doing in production, test behavior before launch, and compare model changes without flying blind.
A modern local-business stack for answering missed calls, qualifying leads, booking appointments, and alerting humans only when someone high-intent is ready to talk.
The development setup replacing VS Code for engineers who want AI that understands the entire codebase — not just the open file. Ship 2-3x faster from blank repo to production URL.
The stack I used to land my last role. Research the company, tailor my materials, and send clean applications without spending hours per listing.
For builders who want backend primitives without stitching together five services. Auth, database, storage, and functions come from Appwrite while the frontend stays in a normal Next.js app.