How we build frontier products.
These posts explain how we build at Cradle Labs: how we turn frontier ideas into production systems, how we decide what belongs in the runtime, and why the real operating constraints shape the architecture before the interface does.
Three notes, drawn from regulated finance, agentic runtimes, background jobs, wallets, savings, team agents, and robotics systems.
Cradle Labs / 2026
We build runtimes before demos.
When we build Glove, Station, Origin, and Cradle Markets, we start by designing the operating layer so the interface is backed by durable contracts, instrumentation, and escape hatches.
Agentic systemsRuntimesInfrastructure Read post 002Trust is part of the interface.
In Cradle Markets, Proxima, Expendi, and APTree, we treat approvals, compliance, custody, and visibility as product primitives that belong inside the flow.
ComplianceApprovalsCustody Read post 003Production is the product.
When the work crosses smart contracts, local payment rails, agent orchestration, background workers, and hardware control, the agency model only works if the team owns the whole path to launch.
Product engineeringLaunchOperations Read postWritten from the build floor
We are not writing trend pieces. These are operating notes: the decisions we keep making when a product has to handle money, agents, queues, approvals, local rails, or physical devices in production.