Stride - The AI workspace that plans, designs and ships with you.
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Stride is the AI-native workspace for the whole build: plan, design, verify, and ship. Its AI works inside your real project data and plugs into Claude Code and Codex over MCP, so it does the work instead of just talking about it. Your team goes from idea to launch without switching tools.


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plans, designs, and ships are three very different modes. plan is about exploring options, design is about constraint, ship is about commit. curious how Stride keeps context coherent across these without flattening them. does it know when to push back on something planned because the design phase showed it's not feasible, or does it just keep building?
Stride
@thenameisarian - This is a genuinely good way to frame it: divergent in plan, narrowing in design, committal in ship. We think about it the same way.
What keeps them from flattening is that they aren't one document, they're different kinds of nodes in one graph. A story isn't an ADR isn't a test case. Plan stays exploratory (multiple options, draft stories), design is explicitly evaluative (the Solution Designer scores three to five options against constraints, so "not feasible" shows up as a low score with reasons, not a vibe), and ship is where the quality gates actually commit or block. The same context flows between them, but each mode keeps its own shape.
On your real question, I'll be honest rather than oversell. Stride won't silently build over a conflict. Because everything's linked, when a design decision or an ADR contradicts something planned, that tension is traceable back to the stories it touches, and a quality gate can block a release with gaps. What it does today is surface the conflict and make you decide, the human stays in the loop on the renegotiation. What it doesn't do yet is autonomously rewrite your plan because design hit a wall, and honestly we think that call should stay human for now. Making the AI flag those conflicts more proactively is exactly where we're headed.
Happy to go deeper on any of it, this is the kind of question we enjoy.
Stride
I've tried a lot of project management tools, and most of them eventually turn into places where information goes to hide.
What I like about Stride is that I spend less time searching and more time actually building. Requirements, discussions, and execution stay connected instead of being scattered across multiple tools. It's one of those products that feels simpler the longer you use it.