Comment by cess11
All I can think about when reading this presentation is that Glamorous Toolkit pretty much has this and more.
All I can think about when reading this presentation is that Glamorous Toolkit pretty much has this and more.
I'm not sure what "AI-native" would mean but GT has LLM-integrations, support for working in distributed systems and a COBOL-bridge that has been used in managing transitions of legacy systems.
Here's a talk about it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8TSPED0alY
If you load the code referenced here, https://book.gtoolkit.com/analyzing-cobol--the-aws-carddemo-... , you can explore the demo used in the talk.
I'm sure you'll manage to figure out the LLM-integrations.
Edit: The Feenk folks also have a structured theory for why and how to do these things that they've spent a lot of time and experience on refining, visualising and developing tooling around.
I think it is a good idea for anyone working with large legacy systems to have such a theoretical foundation for how to communicate, approach problems and evaluate progress. Without it one is highly likely to make expensive decisions based on gut feeling and vague assumptions.
Reminds me of this comment on the Dropbox HN launch thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9224
There are may be other general-purpose tools out there that overlap in some ways, but our focus is on vertically specializing in the mainframe ecosystem and building AI-native tooling specifically for the problems in this space.