<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><oembed><type>video</type><version>1.0</version><html>&lt;iframe src=&quot;https://www.loom.com/embed/92b2fe81fa2a434280dbe9ba8a52ad81&quot; frameborder=&quot;0&quot; width=&quot;1728&quot; height=&quot;1296&quot; webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;</html><height>1296</height><width>1728</width><provider_name>Loom</provider_name><provider_url>https://www.loom.com</provider_url><thumbnail_height>1296</thumbnail_height><thumbnail_width>1728</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_url>https://cdn.loom.com/sessions/thumbnails/92b2fe81fa2a434280dbe9ba8a52ad81-1651f93314a80ae1.gif</thumbnail_url><duration>404.974</duration><title>Bun Workspace Migration for Faster Development</title><description>This Loom explains the migration from pnpm and npm tooling to Bun workspace for faster local development. It notes there will be no pnpm workspace file or pnpm lock, and instead a bun.lock, with day to day commands shifting to bun run, such as bun run dev. The main advantage is that Bun can run TypeScript directly, avoiding the dist build step that Node requires, which also speeds up Docker builds. The speaker demonstrates much faster hot reloading even for deep dependencies by editing code in related packages like LearnCard React, and says the same applies to other services running under Bun. Overall, this is positioned as a near drop in replacement with development performance improvements, while builds are still needed only for publishing to npm.</description></oembed>