A boutique studio where senior engineers pair with AI copilots and Mendix low-code — so you ship enterprise software in weeks, not quarters.
Every engagement gets the same senior bench and the same AI toolchain. Pick the discipline that fits the problem — or combine them.
End-to-end Mendix builds — from greenfield platforms to complex integrations with SAP, Salesforce, and legacy cores.
We engineer workflows around Claude, Cursor, and Copilot — so your codebase gets touched by a senior pair, every commit.
TypeScript, Next.js, and cloud-native backends for the edge cases low-code can't solve. Same senior bench, same velocity.
Coaching programs that turn your team into AI-native builders — prompt craft, review discipline, and Mendix best practice.
Mendix gives us the fastest path from idea to enterprise-grade app. AI copilots give us the leverage of a team ten times our size. Together — they're how we deliver in weeks what used to take quarters.
A week of paired sessions — domain, constraints, success metrics. AI-transcribed, human-authored.
We translate the problem into Mendix domain models and flows, with AI surfacing edge cases we'd otherwise miss.
Senior devs ship in pairs with Claude/Cursor. Every PR gets human + AI review before it lands.
Observability, handover, and enablement so your team can run with it after we step back.
We don't hand you prompts and walk away. Our engineers own the craft — AI accelerates the boring 80%, so they can obsess over the 20% that actually matters: architecture, edge cases, and the code your users feel.
Opinionated, modern, and deliberately small. Every tool earns its place by making a senior engineer meaningfully faster.
Claude
AI pair partner
Mendix
Low-code platform
Cursor
AI-native IDE
Copilot
Inline autocomplete
TypeScript
Custom frontends
Next.js
Web + edge
AWS
Cloud delivery
Azure
Enterprise cloud
Postgres
Datastore
Figma
Design + handoff
Linear
Delivery ops
GitHub
Source of truth
Tell us the problem. In 30 minutes we'll tell you whether AI + Mendix can solve it — and roughly what a first sprint would look like.