By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Scoopico
  • Home
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • True Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Life
  • Money
  • Tech
  • Travel
Reading: Developers can now debug and evaluate AI agents locally with Raindrop's open source tool Workshop
Share
Font ResizerAa
ScoopicoScoopico
Search

Search

  • Home
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • True Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Life
  • Money
  • Tech
  • Travel

Latest Stories

Chicago Cubs Might’ve Fleeced Miami Marlins in Edward Cabrera Trade
Chicago Cubs Might’ve Fleeced Miami Marlins in Edward Cabrera Trade
GENK Q1 2026: Revenue Dips 6% to .9M, Loss Widens to .2M
GENK Q1 2026: Revenue Dips 6% to $53.9M, Loss Widens to $7.2M
Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 15, 2026
Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 15, 2026
United unveils 2 new Japan routes, flights to popular ski destination
United unveils 2 new Japan routes, flights to popular ski destination
AI-generated pro-Spencer Pratt mayoral campaign videos point to a new political reality
AI-generated pro-Spencer Pratt mayoral campaign videos point to a new political reality
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
2025 Copyright © Scoopico. All rights reserved
Developers can now debug and evaluate AI agents locally with Raindrop's open source tool Workshop
Tech

Developers can now debug and evaluate AI agents locally with Raindrop's open source tool Workshop

Scoopico
Last updated: May 15, 2026 1:27 am
Scoopico
Published: May 15, 2026
Share
SHARE



Contents
The product: establishing a self-healing eval loopCompatibility and ecosystem integrationLicensing and community implications

Observability startup Raindrop AI’s new open source, MIT Licensed "Workshop" tool, launched today, gives developers something that they've likely wanted, perhaps subconsciously, since the agentic AI era kicked off in earnest last year: a local debugger and evaluation tool specifically designed for AI agents, allowing devs to see all the traces of what their agent has been doing in a single, lightweight Structured Query Language (SQL) database file (.db)

It functions as a local daemon and UI that streams every token, tool call, and decision to a local dashboard—typically hosted at localhost:5899—the moment it occurs. By visiting their localhost, developers can then see everything their agent was up to — including mistakes or errors — and identify what went wrong, when, and ideally, discern why. It's all stored in a single .db file, which takes up relatively little memory, according to a X direct message VentureBeat received from Ben Hylak, Raindrop's co-founder and CTO (and a former Apple and SpaceX engineer).

This real-time telemetry eliminates the latency of traditional polling and addresses a growing developer concern regarding the privacy of sending local traces to external servers.

The tool is available for macOS, Linux, and Windows. It can be installed through a one-line shell command that automates binary placement and PATH configuration for bash, zsh, and fish shells. For developers who prefer to build from source, the repository is hosted on GitHub and utilizes the Bun runtime.

The product: establishing a self-healing eval loop

The platform’s standout feature is the "self-healing eval loop," which allows coding agents like Claude Code to read traces, write evals against the codebase, and fix broken code autonomously.

In a practical application, if a veterinary assistant agent fails to ask necessary follow-up questions, Workshop captures the full trajectory. Claude Code then reads this trace, writes a specific eval, identifies the logic error in the prompt or code, and re-runs the agent until all assertions pass.

Compatibility and ecosystem integration

Workshop is compatible with a broad range of programming languages, including TypeScript, Python, Rust, and Go.

It integrates with popular SDKs and frameworks such as the Vercel AI SDK, OpenAI, Anthropic, LangChain, LlamaIndex, and CrewAI. It is also designed to work seamlessly with various coding agents, including Claude Code, Cursor, Devin, and OpenCode.

Licensing and community implications

Workshop is released under the MIT License, ensuring it remains free and open-source for all users. This permissive licensing is intended to foster community contribution and allow enterprise users to maintain data sovereignty.

Hylak noted on X that the tool was built to provide a "sane" way to debug agents locally, changing how their team and early customers build autonomous systems.

To celebrate the launch, Raindrop offered limited-edition physical merchandise to users who installed the tool and executed a specific "drip" command.

[/gpt3]

Finest audio system in 2025 (UK)
Greatest Apple MacBook Professional deal: Save over $1,000
Wordle today: The answer and hints for February 13, 2026
‘The Mighty Nein’ solid draft their final Vital Function squad
NYT Connections hints and answers for February 8, Tips to solve ‘Connections’ #973.
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

POPULAR

Chicago Cubs Might’ve Fleeced Miami Marlins in Edward Cabrera Trade
Sports

Chicago Cubs Might’ve Fleeced Miami Marlins in Edward Cabrera Trade

GENK Q1 2026: Revenue Dips 6% to .9M, Loss Widens to .2M
business

GENK Q1 2026: Revenue Dips 6% to $53.9M, Loss Widens to $7.2M

Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 15, 2026
Tech

Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 15, 2026

United unveils 2 new Japan routes, flights to popular ski destination
Travel

United unveils 2 new Japan routes, flights to popular ski destination

AI-generated pro-Spencer Pratt mayoral campaign videos point to a new political reality
U.S.

AI-generated pro-Spencer Pratt mayoral campaign videos point to a new political reality

The Supreme Court keeps abortion pill mifepristone available by telehealth : NPR
Politics

The Supreme Court keeps abortion pill mifepristone available by telehealth : NPR

Scoopico

Stay ahead with Scoopico — your source for breaking news, bold opinions, trending culture, and sharp reporting across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. No fluff. Just the scoop.

  • Home
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • True Crime
  • Entertainment
  • Life
  • Money
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

2025 Copyright © Scoopico. All rights reserved

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?