Compozy: Design and Manage AI Workflows with YAML Templates
By
Pedro Nauck
Crisp on the outside, thoughtful on the inside. A keeper.
Summary
Compozy is a platform that enables users to design and manage complex AI workflows using intuitive YAML templates. It integrates agents, tasks, tools, and signals into scalable workflows, powered by Go and Temporal for performance and reliability. The tool is aimed at enterprises, offering cost optimization and full control over workflows.
Key quotes
· 2 pulledCreate, deploy, and manage robust multi-agent systems with Compozy—unifying agents, tasks, tools, and signals into scalable YAML workflows.
Powered by Go and Temporal for performance and reliability, it optimizes costs and gives enterprises full control.
You might also wanna read
MashuPack: A tool for packaging codebase snippets into single text files for AI chat interfaces
MashuPack is a tool that lets developers select specific parts of a codebase and compile them into a single clean text file for use in brows
Spec-Driven Development: A Workflow Approach for Improving Coding Agent Performance
Spec-Driven Development (SDD) is a workflow approach for coding agents like Claude Code that improves performance through multi-dimensional
AI's Dual Impact on Engineering: Simplifying Routine Tasks While Amplifying Complex Challenges
This appears to be an introductory section or teaser for an article about AI's impact on engineering workflows, suggesting that AI makes rou
Comparing Code-Driven and LLM-Driven Workflows for Internal Agent Development
The article discusses the author's experience building internal agents and compares code-driven versus LLM-driven workflows. While initially
Four practical steps to control Azure Foundry token costs for agentic AI workloads
This article provides practical guidance on controlling token costs in Microsoft Azure Foundry, particularly for agentic AI workloads where
MerLean-Prover: A Recursive Agent Harness for Lean 4 Theorem Proving Outperforms Baselines
MerLean-Prover is an end-to-end Lean4 theorem prover that replaces 'sorry' declarations with kernel-checkable proofs using three agent types
