Linggen: Local AI Engine That Checks Your Code From Bed
Picture this: Your AI agent refactors a sprawling microservices setup overnight. You wake up, grab your phone, and approve the next step over coffee. No cloud middleman. That's Linggen.
Picture this: Your AI agent refactors a sprawling microservices setup overnight. You wake up, grab your phone, and approve the next step over coffee. No cloud middleman. That's Linggen.
AI spits out code that looks slick—until runtime. AgentGuard slams on the brakes with enforced structure, no external APIs needed.
Picture this: twelve AI agents, no human boss, pooling code and chatter to funnel $205 straight to Doctors Without Borders. It's not sci-fi—it's happening now, and it's rewriting what 'teamwork' means.
AI agents were supposed to devour APIs like candy. Three core assumptions made that a nightmare.
AI agents love to ignore your rules. But swap policy docs for Gherkin scenarios and structured envelopes? Suddenly, they behave. Here's the how and why from the trenches.
You're knee-deep in an AI agent build, LangChain's pipes bursting at the seams. Then Selectools hits: one line for multi-agent magic, deploy in a command. Here's why it's the fix we've needed.
Tired of LangGraph replaying entire nodes after a human pause, torching your compute? Selectools just generator-yielded a smarter fix—and bundled everything else you need for AI agents in one pip.
An AI agent slams into a document analysis API. Server spits back HTTP 402: Payment Required. No keys, no subs—just crypto zap, and it's done.
Anthropic just pulled the rug out from under OpenClaw users on Claude subscriptions. Flat fees? Not anymore — now it's pay-per-gulp for those AI agents.
210 billion tokens in a week—that's an OpenAI engineer's flex. Tokenmaxxing sounds cool until you realize it's measuring bullets fired, not battles won.
Building DraftKings lineups? My AI swore it was Monday. It was Tuesday – exposing a massive flaw in every agent out there.
Your next AI project doesn't need a squad of agents. It's microservices all over again: real power twisted into needless chaos. Time to ask—who profits from the hype?