TGTGInsighttelegram intelligenceLIVE / telegram public index
← GitHub Trends

TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS

Find similar content

Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15491 · Feb 13

#javascript#agents#ai#ai_agents#automation#claude#cli#development#framework#fullstack#nodejs#orchestration#typescript Synkra AIOS is an AI-powered development framework that automates software creation through specialized agents working together in coordinated teams. It uses a two-phase approach: planning agents (analyst, PM, architect) create detailed project specifications, then development agents (Scrum Master, developer, QA) execute those plans with full context preserved throughout. The framework prioritizes CLI-first operations with observability and UI as secondary layers, eliminating common problems like planning inconsistency and context loss in AI-assisted development. You benefit from faster, more coherent project delivery with autonomous agents handling planning, coding, and quality assurance while maintaining architectural consistency and reducing manual coordination overhead. https://github.com/SynkraAI/aios-core

Results

2 similar posts found

Search: #largemagellaniccloud

当前筛选 #largemagellaniccloud清除筛选
Universe Mysteries 🪐

@cosmomyst · Post #743 · 04/16/2026, 10:21 PM

🪐 Astronomers used an exploding star, supernova SN 1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud (about 168,000 light-years away), to precisely measure the speed of light across vast space. Light and ghostly particles called neutrinos from the explosion reached Earth just hours apart, providing real proof that even over intergalactic distances, light always travels at the same constant speed—299,792 kilometers per second. ✨ #speedoflight⚡#supernova⚡#LargeMagellanicCloud⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space 👉subscribe Universe Mysteries 👉more Channels ​

Universe Mysteries 🪐

@cosmomyst · Post #247 · 09/09/2025, 04:11 PM

🪐 In the Tarantula Nebula of the Large Magellanic Cloud, light from young, massive stars races outward at the universal speed limit—299,792 kilometers per second—helping illuminate vast clouds of gas across 1,000 light-years of space. Because nothing can travel faster than this speed in a vacuum, the glow we see from such stellar nurseries is always an echo from the past, showing us cosmic events exactly as they unfolded years, decades, or even millennia ago. ✨ #speedoflight⚡#tarantulanebula⚡#largemagellaniccloud⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space 👉subscribe Universe Mysteries ​