The Pull: Week 25, 2026
This week in open source: AI video workflows, editing copilots, and a map of your codebase built for agents
1) OpenMontage: Video Production Gets Unbundled
github.com/calesthio/OpenMontage | License: AGPL-3.0
Featured in The Push: June 20th, 2026
OpenMontage turns an AI coding assistant into a full video production system, not just a clip generator. The clever part is its pipeline architecture, which plans, sources, edits, validates, and tracks costs across many tools. Founders, agencies, and content teams that produce repeatable video should look closely.
1714 stars/day | 7.0 watchers/day
2) Palmier Pro: Video Editing Gets Agent Rails
github.com/palmier-io/palmier-pro | License: GPL-3.0
Featured in The Push: June 19th, 2026
Palmier Pro turns a macOS video editor into a shared workspace for humans and AI agents. The clever bit is the MCP layer, which gives assistants structured access to the timeline instead of limiting them to chat suggestions. Creators, agencies, and content teams exploring repeatable AI-assisted editing should pay attention.
1661 stars/day | 10.5 watchers/day
3) Codebase Memory Mcp: The Repo Map Agents Deserve
github.com/DeusData/codebase-memory-mcp | License: MIT
Featured in The Push: June 19th, 2026
Codebase Memory Mcp turns a repository into a local, queryable graph that AI coding agents can actually reason over. The clever bit is not just speed, it is replacing repeated file scavenging with structural memory. Teams managing large, messy, multi-service codebases should pay attention.
1134 stars/day | 3.0 watchers/day
4) Turso: SQLite Stops Acting Small
github.com/tursodatabase/turso | License: MIT
Featured in The Push: June 20th, 2026
Turso turns SQLite into something much more ambitious, an embedded database with concurrency upgrades, live change streams, browser support, and AI-facing control surfaces. The clever part is the compatibility-first architecture. Teams building local-first apps, edge products, or AI tools with persistent state should pay attention.
594 stars/day | 3.0 watchers/day
5) TimesFM: Forecasting Escapes the Spreadsheet Trap
github.com/google-research/timesfm | License: Apache-2.0
Featured in The Push: June 19th, 2026
TimesFM turns pretrained transformers into a forecasting engine for messy business time series. The clever part is not just using a big model, it is the normalization, uncertainty bands, and covariate design that make one model usable across wildly different signals. Product, ops, and data teams should look.
440 stars/day | 1.5 watchers/day
6) Kilo Code: The IDE Bundles Back
github.com/Kilo-Org/kilocode | License: MIT
Featured in The Push: June 20th, 2026
Kilo Code turns AI coding into a unified workspace across IDEs, terminal, and automation flows. The clever bit is not code generation, it is the role-based architecture plus model switching and autonomous execution in one control layer. Worth a look for teams trying to standardize AI-assisted building without locking into one vendor.
416 stars/day | 3.0 watchers/day
7) Herdr: Tmux Finally Meets Agents
github.com/ogulcancelik/herdr | License: Other
Featured in The Push: June 15th, 2026
Herdr turns the terminal into a persistent control surface for multiple AI agents, with built-in state awareness and a programmable session layer. The clever bit is keeping real terminal processes intact while adding orchestration semantics on top. Worth a look for anyone managing parallel AI work, especially across repos or remote machines.
147 stars/day | 0.3 watchers/day
8) Swc: Babel’s Speed Tax Is Optional
github.com/swc-project/swc | License: Apache-2.0
Featured in The Push: June 14th, 2026
Swc turns JavaScript and TypeScript compilation into fast, embeddable infrastructure for the modern web stack. The clever part is not just raw speed, it is the compatibility-first compiler architecture that frameworks can build on. Anyone tracking frontend velocity, developer tooling, or infrastructure moats should look closely.
51 stars/day | 1.6 watchers/day
9) Optimizer Duck: Windows Tweaking Needed Adult UX
github.com/itsfatduck/optimizerDuck | License: Other
Featured in The Push: June 15th, 2026
Optimizer Duck turns Windows cleanup and tuning into a safer, more legible workflow. The smart part is the revert-first architecture, plus one interface that combines optimization, inspection, and rollback. Worth a look for gamers, refurbishers, support teams, and anyone tired of treating Windows performance like superstition.
120 stars/day | 0.2 watchers/day
10) TeslaMate: Your Car Should Show Its Work
github.com/teslamate-org/teslamate | License: AGPL-3.0
Featured in The Push: June 15th, 2026
TeslaMate turns a Tesla into a self-hosted telemetry product, with durable logging, sleep-aware data collection, and strong analytics outputs through Grafana and MQTT. The clever part is the architecture’s respect for vehicle state, which preserves battery while keeping rich history. Tesla owners, home automation users, and small EV fleets should look.
59 stars/day | 0.8 watchers/day
11) Pytest: Testing Finally Feels Like Product
github.com/pytest-dev/pytest | License: MIT
Featured in The Push: June 14th, 2026
Pytest turns software testing into a low-friction feedback system instead of a ceremony-heavy chore. The clever part is its architecture, especially fixtures plus a hook-driven plugin layer, which lets one lightweight tool scale into a full testing platform. Product teams, founders, and anyone shipping Python software should pay attention.
39 stars/day | 0.0 watchers/day
12) OpenEnv: RL Needed Better Test Grounds
github.com/huggingface/OpenEnv | License: BSD-3-Clause
Featured in The Push: June 14th, 2026
OpenEnv turns agent training environments into portable, containerized services with a tiny RL-friendly interface. The clever bit is standardizing the arena, not the model, which makes evaluation, post-training, and workflow-specific simulation much easier to share. Best for teams building serious agents, especially where actions unfold over multiple steps.
19 stars/day | 0.1 watchers/day



