Built in the
open.
Closed studios drift. Working in public is the cheapest accountability there is — and most of what we ship is downstream of someone else doing the same.
- 01 Studio MIT
mcp-elements/ui
A multi-framework component library for AI apps — 38 copy-paste components for React, Vue, and Angular, including MCP-native primitives: tool-call cards, schema-driven forms, and OAuth consent dialogs. Copy the code into your project and own it.
- 02 Studio AGPL-3.0
teamsly
A keyboard-first Microsoft Teams client with AI thread summaries, a command palette, voice rooms, and an MCP server that lets Claude read and send messages — the Teams client developers actually want. Self-hostable.
- 03 Studio MIT
lit-pigeon
A drag & drop email editor you embed in your own app — web components that export clean, responsive MJML and HTML. The visual editor, without the proprietary SaaS attached.
- 04 Studio MIT
promptbucket
An open library for collecting, versioning, and sharing prompts that survive contact with production. Built for the working AI engineer — no walled garden, no waitlist, no upsell.
- 05 Studio MIT
searoute-ts
Open-source library that computes the shortest realistic sea-route between any two coordinates on Earth. Sub-5ms median compute, accurate around the world's major canals and chokepoints. Quietly powering production logistics platforms.
- 06 Studio MIT
github-angular-actions
GitHub Action that pre-installs Angular CLI and dependencies with configurable versions. Saves real CI minutes on real builds — boring infrastructure that earns its keep.
- 07 Studio MIT
SherlockQA
A lightweight QA & testing companion. Inspect, investigate, and validate apps with a detective's sense of suspicion.
- 08 Studio MIT
whatsapp-hero
Python utility for working with WhatsApp data. Pragmatic, single-purpose, useful when you need it.
Every tool we use stands on the shoulders of someone who chose to share what they built. Open source is how we contribute back to that chain — releasing the small, honest utilities we built for ourselves and would have wanted to find.
We don't open-source as marketing. We open-source because the act of writing code that strangers might read keeps us honest, invites collaboration, and makes the tool genuinely useful instead of merely demo-ready.
Find us on GitHub.
Star the things you use, file the issues you find, send the pull requests we deserved.