

Agents & APIs SF Developer Meetup
Join us for another awesome Agents and APIs Developer Meetup brought to you by Postman!
You'll have a great time learning, making new friends, watching live demos, and enjoying delicious pizza!
Speakers
Talia Kohan, Staff Developer Advocate, Postman
Beyond Code Generation: Building Context-Aware Engineering Agents
Most AI coding tools can generate code. Few can answer a more important question: what else needs to change?
In modern systems, a single API change can impact specifications, collections, backend services, frontend applications, tests, CI/CD pipelines, databases, documentation, and infrastructure. Experienced engineers know that implementing the change is often the easy part. Understanding its downstream impact—and updating every dependent system correctly—is where the real work begins.
This talk explores how autonomous agents can move beyond code generation by leveraging a Context Graph built from the artifacts engineering teams already maintain: API specifications, collections, tests, environments, source code, and runtime dependencies. Rather than operating on individual files in isolation, these agents can reason about relationships across an entire system.
Julie Chen, Founding GTM, Photon
From Webhook to Blue Bubble: Bringing AI Agents to iMessage
Agent demo lives in a web chat or a Slack bot - but in the US, people are on iMessage, and Apple ships no public API for it. Photon's Spectrum collapses that into two calls: a webhook that hands your agent an inbound message, and an endpoint that replies natively as a blue bubble. We'll cover the protocol problems Spectrum abstracts away, and how the same unified API extends to WhatsApp, Telegram, and SMS. Then a quick live demo: an agent replying on iMessage in a few lines of code.
Muhammad Hashmi, Developer Relations Engineer, Daytona
"All tests pass" means nothing, especially if your agent says so.
CI was already a weak signal, but it's even more useless when the same agent wrote both the implementation and the test that's supposed to catch its mistakes.
This demo shows the benefits of making your agents give every PR a receipt. A coding agent boots the PR branch in a Daytona sandbox, drives the running app through a real browser (or via computer-use), and attaches the recording back to GitHub - all of which happens autonomously.
The same loop applies to AI code review. When a code review agent (Greptile, CodeRabbit, Copilot, or your custom agent) flags a potential bug, the agent tries to reproduce it inside a live sandbox: confirming or refuting the bug with video proof.
Stop being your agent's QA. The work and the proof should arrive together.
Samuel Stroschein, Founder, Lix
Flashtype - Markdown editor for Claude & Codex
Code editors show markdown source, not the document itself. Flashtype is an open source WYSIWYG markdown editor for Claude Code and Codex that shows agent edits as inline diffs in the rendered document, so you can accept, reject, or restore changes without raw text diffs.
Space is limited. Register today. See you soon!
Note: Doors open at 5:15p. Entry will not be granted prior to that. Thank you for your understanding.
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