mattpocock/sandcastle

Orchestrate sandboxed coding agents in TypeScript with sandcastle.run()

View on GitHub

What it does

Sandcastle is a tool that lets you run multiple AI coding assistants simultaneously, each working in its own isolated environment so they don't interfere with each other, then automatically combines their work. Think of it like spinning up a team of AI developers who each work in separate rooms and hand you their finished contributions when done.

Why it matters

As AI coding agents become a core part of software development workflows, the ability to run them in parallel — rather than one at a time — could dramatically compress development timelines and reduce costs. Teams that can orchestrate fleets of AI agents efficiently will have a meaningful speed and productivity advantage over those running them sequentially.

38Active

On the radar — signal detected

Stars
3.8k
Forks
358
Contributors
6
Language
TypeScript

Score updated May 7, 2026

Related projects

Quarkdown is a writing and publishing tool that lets you create books, academic papers, presentations, and websites all from a single document using an enhanced version of Markdown (a simple text formatting language). Instead of juggling multiple tools for different output formats, you write once and the system automatically produces polished, print-ready results in whatever format you need.

// why it matters With over 11,000 stars on GitHub, there is clear demand for a unified authoring tool that eliminates the fragmentation between documentation, publishing, and presentation software — a space currently dominated by expensive or clunky incumbents like LaTeX and Microsoft Office. For builders, this signals a growing market of creators and researchers who want developer-friendly, version-controllable workflows for professional publishing without the overhead of traditional desktop tools.

Kotlin13.5k stars373 forks16 contrib

MDN Web Docs is the internet's most comprehensive free reference guide for web technologies, covering everything developers need to know about building websites and web applications — from basic HTML page structure to advanced browser capabilities. It's maintained collaboratively by over 45,000 contributors worldwide and serves as the de facto standard resource that web builders consult daily.

// why it matters With over 14,000 pages of documentation and millions of developers relying on it as their primary reference, MDN represents the shared knowledge infrastructure underlying virtually every web product built today. For founders and product teams, it signals what web capabilities are standardized and stable enough to build on — making it an essential signal for technology roadmap decisions.

Markdown10.7k stars23.2k forks5510 contrib

Web Platform Tests (WPT) is a massive shared test suite that checks whether all major web browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, and others — behave consistently when displaying websites and web apps. Think of it as a universal quality checklist that browser makers run to confirm their software follows the agreed-upon rules of how the web should work.

// why it matters When browsers behave differently, developers must build workarounds that add cost and slow down shipping — WPT is the industry's shared mechanism for reducing that friction, making the web a more reliable platform for products to run on. For builders, broader browser consistency means less money spent on cross-browser bug fixes and greater confidence that web-based products will reach users as intended, regardless of what device or browser they use.

HTML5.9k stars3.8k forks3245 contrib

LLVM is the foundational technology that turns code written by developers into programs that computers can actually run, and it's used to build compilers for languages like C, C++, and many others. Think of it as the invisible translation engine that sits behind many of the world's most popular programming languages and development tools.

// why it matters Nearly every major tech company — Apple, Google, Meta, and more — relies on LLVM to power their software development pipelines, meaning it underpins the tools that build most modern apps and systems. For builders, understanding LLVM matters because it's the infrastructure behind emerging programming languages and performance-critical software, making it a key leverage point for teams building developer tools, new languages, or platform technologies.

LLVM38.2k stars17.1k forks8791 contrib
// SUBSCRIBE

The repos that moved this week, why they matter, and what to watch next. One email. No noise.