Vercel Workflows builder night
Vercel is holding a builder night in London focused on Workflows, its new product for building and deploying agents, and the event features Vercel engineers. The announcement positions the session as a hands‑on opportunity for builders using Next.js and Vercel’s agent tooling. (X post)
Vercel is bringing a Workflows builder night to London, pitching it as a hands-on session for developers building AI agents in TypeScript. (luma.com) The London event page says attendees will hear from Vercel engineering leadership, see a customer spotlight, and join a workshop to build and deploy an agent with the team that built the product. The posted agenda runs from 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., with food, drinks, and a laptop-required workshop. (luma.com) Vercel’s documentation describes Workflow as a managed service in beta built on its open-source Workflow Software Development Kit, or SDK. The company says it is designed for apps and AI agents that need to pause, resume, retry, and keep state across long-running tasks. (vercel.com) That framing puts the event in the middle of Vercel’s broader push to sell “durable” agents — software that can survive delays, failures, and multi-step jobs instead of restarting from scratch. Vercel’s Workflow page says the product replaces custom queues and retry logic with resumable code. (vercel.com) The timing also lines up with a wider product rollout. Vercel’s public events page lists multiple in-person appearances in 2026 built around its “AI Cloud” message, and the London builder night is branded on Luma as part of a “Workflows GA: Launch Tour.” (vercel.com, luma.com) Vercel has been building supporting pieces around that pitch for months. In January, the company open-sourced Workflow Builder, a visual automation platform that includes an editor, execution engine, and infrastructure for custom workflow tools and agents. (vercel.com) Its GitHub repository shows the Workflow SDK has also been moving quickly, with recent updates to migration guides, cookbook recipes, and durable agent tests. The repository describes the SDK as a way to add durability, reliability, and observability to asynchronous JavaScript. (github.com) Vercel has tied that work to Next.js and coding agents more broadly. Recent company posts on agent skills, AGENTS.md files, and agent-friendly documentation show the same strategy: make Vercel and Next.js easier for automated coding tools to use correctly. (vercel.com, vercel.com, vercel.com) For London developers, the immediate pitch is simpler than the product language: show up, bring a laptop, and ship a working workflow with Vercel engineers in the room. The company says space is limited and requires registration. (luma.com)