When it comes to productivity, developer experience is more than just a buzzword. Creating an intuitive developer experience could help you get more out of LocalStack by democratizing access, cutting out manual tasks, and making environments more easily interchangeable between LocalStack and AWS.On a day-to-day basis, this could mean fewer tickets, less time spent creating environments, and more time on the important work that your environments support.This demo session will show how LocalStack’s new integration with Quali Torque can accelerate deployment on both LocalStack and AWS by:* Using generative AI to create reusable environment templates that can be deployed to LocalStack and AWS interchangeably in just a few clicks.( Providing a self-service catalog for your teams to find and provision environments quickly and easily—and without access to create or modify resource configurations.* Simplifying the deployment experience by eliminating complexity and security requirements to run environments on AWS.* Tracking all activity to identify performance issues for LocalStack deployments and wasted cloud costs for AWS deployments proactively.

An agent will write you a CDK stack, a Terraform module, or a stack of IAM policies in seconds.
Whether any of it works is a separate question, and the usual way to find out is to deploy to a real AWS account and watch what breaks.
In an agentic workflow, that means giving AI access to a public cloud account, racking up costs on the AWS bill, and waiting for provisioning to complete every time you push new code to the environment.

The rise of agentic AI in the software delivery lifecycle creates a dilemma with high-stakes implications.
As agents create new applications at an unprecedented rate, how do you integrate security without slowing down delivery?

You've been there: Lambda triggers, SQS messages fly, Step Functions execute, and somewhere in the middle, something breaks. You have no idea what triggered what, what payload was passed, or where it all went wrong.
That's the black box problem of AWS development.
Once your architecture grows beyond a single service, visibility disappears fast. You're left stitching together scattered logs and redeploying just to see what's going on.
App Inspector is LocalStack's built-in observability layer that opens up that black box. It gives you a real-time, unified view of every service interaction happening inside your local cloud: what triggered what, with what payload, in what order.
In this talk, we'll walk through what App Inspector is, how it fits into your LocalStack workflow, and how to use it to catch bugs locally before they ever reach staging or production.