I really like this. If you ever plan an AMI with this, deploying hyperclay on maybe a t3 instance, installing Node.js via the package manager (https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-javascript/v3/developer-...), and then setting up the Hyperclay server using npm to handle requests, I think a lot of startups could be users. Would it be fair to say that Hyperclay could offer a lean way to rapidly prototype and iterate on MVPs, like landing pages, dashboards, or user-feedback-driven tools, where frontend changes (e.g., A/B testing UI elements) automatically update the underlying HTML source for instant deployment??

If it was marketed to startups to reduce development overhead by eliminating separate build pipelines or servers, allowing small teams to focus on core features rather than infrastructure, definite winner. Not sure how much your into AWS but this made me think of an AWS partner we use HostJane could use Hyperclay to help bundle cost-optimized spot instances for testing (mainly tech startup clients - https://www.hostjane.com), then push out a seamless CI/CD via CodePipeline, global distribution through CloudFront, Hyperclay could enable clients to scale from proof-of-concept to production affordably while maintaining full control over their app's evolution without vendor lock-in. Potentially doing away with complex databases or backend frameworks... amazing, well done!