 A story was published on Habr about a video editor with 20 years of experience who created his own video editor. Because he got tired of waiting for software to catch up with his needs. One person, without a team, without investors — he just took it and wrote it. I read it and thought: how many such solo developers are currently reinventing the wheel because they don’t know that AI agents can already take over 80% of the routine? Imagine: you write the core of the editor, while an AI agent simultaneously tests builds, searches for bugs in logs, generates API documentation, and even suggests rendering optimizations based on your code analysis. Not an abstract ChatGPT in a window — but an agent that lives in your repository, monitors CI/CD, pulls up fresh articles on WebGL and GLSL, and writes to you in Telegram: “Hey, I found a bug in the blur shader, here’s a fix.” This is not science fiction. Right now, AI agents can analyze code, find bottlenecks, and propose solutions in seconds. A solo developer with one AI agent is like a studio of three people: a project manager, a tester, and a tech writer all in one. The case of the video editor is a perfect example of a growth point. He created a product that thousands need. But how much time did he spend on what a machine could have done? A month? Two? On the ASI Biont platform, we are building an ecosystem of such agents — tailored to specific development tasks. Not a universal bolt, but tools that are sharpened for your stack. 1500 tokens to start — try assembling your own team of AI agents for your project. Maybe you’ll write the next video editor in a week.