This product was not featured by Product Hunt yet. It will not be visible on their landing page and won't be ranked (cannot win product of the day regardless of upvotes).
Product upvotes vs the next 3
Waiting for data. Loading
Product comments vs the next 3
Waiting for data. Loading
Product upvote speed vs the next 3
Waiting for data. Loading
Product upvotes and comments
Waiting for data. Loading
Product vs the next 3
Loading
DevMesh
Agentic Development Environment - DevMesh
DevMesh is the vibecoding app for builders. Drive a kanban, terminal, and agent swarm from one prompt — and ship real products without breaking flow.
DevMesh
What inspired me to build it
I was using every coding agent at once — and none of them knew the
others existed.
Claude in one terminal tab. Codex in another. Gemini somewhere
else. A fourth window where I was trying opencode. No shared
context, no coordination — just me, copy-pasting between windows
like a human API gateway, holding the whole plan in my head
because none of the tools could.
At some point I stopped and asked: why am I the integration layer?
I don't manage my human teammates by pasting messages between
their desks. I wanted something that felt like running a small dev
team — assign roles, let them coordinate, watch the work, step in
when needed.
That tool didn't exist. So I built it.
The problems I'm actually trying to solve
1. Vendor lock-in is a tax on developers. Every model is best at
something different, but the tools force you to pick one
ecosystem. DevMesh runs Claude, Codex, Gemini and opencode side by
side — OAuth in with your accounts, or bring your own keys. Your
models, your billing, your choice.
2. "One super-agent" is less reliable than a coordinated team. A
single agent can write code. But shipping software is planning +
building + reviewing + testing — different perspectives with
different priorities. That's a team problem, not a prompt problem.
So DevMesh has Swarm mode: a Coordinator decomposes the goal,
Builders implement, Scouts explore, Reviewers and QA check the
work — all in parallel, coordinating through a shared kanban and
mailbox.
3. Agentic tools went black-box, and developers hate that. I don't
want a summary of what an agent decided — I want to read the
terminal. DevMesh keeps everything in tabbed terminals you watch
in real time. Full transparency, full ability to intervene.
4. Your source code shouldn't leave your machine to get this.
DevMesh is local-first. Agents, terminals and state all run on
your Mac. Nothing routes through someone else's cloud. That's not
a feature bullet — it's the whole foundation.
How the approach evolved while building it
It started as a weekend prototype: an Electron app with tabbed
terminals. Honestly just a nicer way to juggle the tabs I already
had.
Then I added the ability to run agents from different providers in
the same window — and that was the first moment it felt like more
than a terminal multiplexer. Mixing models wasn't a gimmick; it
was the point.
But independent agents weren't enough. They'd duplicate work, step
on each other, burn tokens going in circles. That's when I
realized parallelism without coordination is just faster chaos —
and Swarm mode was born: roles, a coordinator, a structured
communication layer.
A few things I learned the hard way:
- Multi-agent orchestration is 80% communication design, 20% model
capability. The hard part isn't the models — it's how they talk
to each other.
- Developers don't want dashboards. They want terminals they can
read. Every time I added abstraction, it got worse. I kept ripping
it back out.
- A well-coordinated team of mid-tier models beats one frontier
model doing everything. Same as human teams.
- Desktop apps are still a viable path in 2026. Not everything
needs to be SaaS — and "local-first" turned out to be the
most-requested thing, not a niche preference.
Today it's the tool I use every single day to build itself. And
now it's live for everyone.
Orchestrate every coding agent. Locally. → devmesh.app
About DevMesh on Product Hunt
“Agentic Development Environment - DevMesh”
DevMesh was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 4 upvotes and 1 comments, placing #95 on the daily leaderboard. DevMesh is the vibecoding app for builders. Drive a kanban, terminal, and agent swarm from one prompt — and ship real products without breaking flow.
On the analytics side, DevMesh competes within Software Engineering, Developer Tools and Artificial Intelligence — topics that collectively have 1M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how DevMesh performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted DevMesh?
DevMesh was hunted by Bence Kapas. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of DevMesh including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.