The Weekly Peel: 2026-03-01
Reggie Release, a Website Overhaul, and Social Network Polish
What a week for shipping. We’ve got a major open-source release, a full website overhaul, some much-needed social platform improvements, and better internal tooling that’s already making our lives easier.
Reggie Goes Public: 37 Agents Strong
The biggest news this week is the initial public release of Reggie, our structured collaboration system for working with Claude AI. This isn’t just another AI wrapper — it’s a full pipeline architecture featuring 37 specialized agents, 34 commands, and quality gates to ensure reliable output.
The team spent considerable time this week making Reggie accessible to everyone. The installation process now works smoothly across Windows, macOS, and Linux, with detailed PowerShell setup instructions for Windows users who need symlink support. The documentation got a major refresh too, including a proper README, quick-start guide, and comprehensive installation instructions.
One neat addition is the stats tracking system that hooks into your workflow, giving you insights into how you’re collaborating with AI. Plus, there’s now a proper logo to go with the release — always important for that professional polish.
Social Platform Gets More Social
Our no-AI social network project saw some significant user experience improvements this week. The team tackled several areas that were causing friction for new and existing users alike.
The authentication flow is now much smoother. Sign-up and login forms finally play nice with iOS autofill, the password visibility toggle actually works as expected, and username availability checking happens in real-time. These might seem like small details, but they’re exactly the kind of polish that makes or breaks a user’s first impression.
Profile functionality got some love too. You can now actually view followers and following lists (surprising how often that gets overlooked in early social platforms), profile photos display properly across the app, and there’s a full-screen photo viewing experience that doesn’t feel cramped.
The Banana Standard Website: A Full Overhaul
The website received its biggest update yet this week, with a massive push to main that touched nearly every part of the site. Rather than incremental tweaks, this was a ground-up rethinking of what the site offers and how it presents itself.
The most visible addition is BananaGrabber, an interactive game built right into the site. Players grow banana trees, collect bananas, cook recipes, and trade in an exchange store — all persistent across pages and browser tabs. It’s a fun layer on top of what’s otherwise a standard company site, and it ties directly into the banana theme.
The blog is now fully live with a proper content pipeline, article pages with scroll-driven color transitions, and a filterable index. We also built out dedicated project pages for Color Lock and RetroFantasy, giving each project its own space with detailed descriptions and visuals.
A new services page lays out what we actually offer, and the entire site got a design facelift — updated typography, consistent page headers, smoother navigation, and a more cohesive visual identity throughout. Under the hood, we also migrated the development infrastructure to a modern toolchain that should make future updates significantly faster.