Stitch Agent and the streaming design that disrupts your workflow

Published on May 24, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Google introduced a design assistant called Stitch Agent at I/O that changes the game. Its core novelty is real-time streaming: you see components appear as the AI works and can interrupt it to redirect the result before it finishes. It accepts text, voice, code, or design files as input.

interactive design streaming interface, glowing blue UI components materializing mid-air during real-time AI generation, designer hand reaching to interrupt a floating code block mid-stream, voice waveform and text input merging into a 3D wireframe, digital architecture with modular blocks snapping into place while others dissolve, cinematic technical visualization, holographic grid floor reflecting the process, dynamic motion trails from unfinished elements, photorealistic engineering render, high-contrast neon accents on dark background, sharp focus on the interruption gesture

From description to backend in three direct steps 🚀

The workflow is reduced to describing, refining, and exporting. The finished design is shared via an AI Studio link or exported directly to Antigravity to add backend logic. Google Flow and Bespoke Tools apply similar logic for video editing and creating custom creative tools. The process goes from days to minutes without needing to touch complex code.

Watching the AI work live is like watching paint dry, but faster ⏳

Now you can see your design being built piece by piece, like a cooking show where the chef messes up on purpose so you can yell from the couch. The trick is you can stop the disaster before it ends. Of course, with all this streaming and redirection, you might end up spending more time correcting than describing. But hey, at least it looks productive.