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Kiro is a spec-driven agentic coding tool for IDE, CLI and web that turns prompts into specs and catches bugs with property-based tests.
AI codebase assistant that chats with your repos to search, debug, review PRs, and generate docs and unit tests.
Agentic terminal and cloud agent platform (Warp Terminal, Warp Agent, Oz) for developers orchestrating Claude Code, Codex, and other agents.
Google's open-source TypeScript framework for building scalable web apps, featuring signals, reactivity and first-party tooling.
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- ✦Spec-driven development (requirements, design, tasks)
- ✦Parallel agents, local or cloud
- ✦Property-based and correctness testing
- ✦Works in IDE, CLI, web and mobile
- ✦Multiple models (Claude, open-weight, Auto)
- ✦Headless CLI for CI/CD
- ✦Context from tools like Figma and Terraform
- ✦Chat with your repositories
- ✦Natural-language codebase search
- ✦Fast code indexing
- ✦AI pull-request and commit review
- ✦Automated documentation generation
- ✦AI unit-test generation
- ✦Modern terminal rebuilt for agentic coding workflows
- ✦Warp Agent with multi-agent orchestration and model routing
- ✦Oz platform for launching agents into the cloud via SDK, CLI, or terminal
- ✦Codebase indexing and granular permission controls
- ✦Team-wide usage visibility and spend/credit caps
- ✦Open-source terminal core
- ✦Signals-based fine-grained reactivity
- ✦Built-in control flow and deferrable views
- ✦Server-side rendering and hydration
- ✦First-party routing, forms and dependency injection
- ✦AI-forward tooling and MCP resources
- ✦In-browser tutorials and playground
- →Turning prompts into maintainable, spec-matched code
- →Catching bugs unit tests miss
- →Reviewing PRs and fixing bugs in CI/CD
- →Onboard new developers to a codebase
- →Resolve bugs faster
- →Generate docs and tests automatically
- →Review pull requests with AI
- →Developers who want an AI-assisted terminal for daily coding
- →Teams orchestrating multiple coding agents (Claude Code, Codex) together
- →Engineering orgs needing governance over agent-driven development
- →Companies moving agent workflows from local machines to the cloud
- →Building scalable single-page apps
- →Enterprise web application development
- →Performance-critical front ends
- →Learning modern web development