Cover Photo for React Toronto Meetup: Agentic React apps, Secrets in Next.js and more!

React Toronto Meetup: Agentic React apps, Secrets in Next.js and more!

Primary Photo for React Toronto

Hosted by

React Toronto

In-Person

Address available to attendees

Ready to join in on the fun?

👋 Hi React folks,

On September 29, we’re bringing the React community together in Toronto! 🎉
Expect an evening full of:
· Tech talks, pizza & drinks
· Fresh ideas and side-hustle projects
· Networking and great conversations with fellow devs

🗣 Call for Proposals
Have an idea or story to share? Submit your talk proposal through our CFP form and take the stage at one of our upcoming meetups!

🕑 Event Schedule

  • 18:00 - Doors open
  • 18:30 - Intro and announcements
  • 18:40 - How I Ignored Reddit and Made a Steam Game Using React by Seve Savoie Teruel
  • 19:05 - Make Agents Talk to You by Sergiy Dybskiy
  • 19:30 - Break with drinks
  • 19:45 - Secure Secrets in Next.js for Human and Non-Human Developers by Phil Miller
  • Mingle until 21:00

🤝 Supported by
This event made possible thanks to the support from React Advanced Toronto organizers – GitNation.

🤝 Hosted by
Kudos to our partner Super.com!

🤝 In collaboration with
Huge thanks to our friend Sentry!
Sentry is the only app monitoring platform built for developers that gets to the root cause for every issue. For software teams, Sentry is essential for monitoring application code quality. From Error tracking to Performance monitoring, developers can see clearer & solve quicker — from frontend to backend.

🙌 Special thanks
We’d also like to thank our friends at Toronto.js for their support in making this meetup happen.

👍 Code of Conduct
By registering for this event you agree to comply with our CoC

📩 Contact
s@serg.tech

Presentations

Sergiy Dybskiy

Make Agents Talk to You

Agentic React apps where UIs autonomously act, chain tool calls, and evolve state—bring complexity that traditional observability tools can't unravel. How do you actually understand what your agents are doing in production?

In this talk, we'll explore agent observability: capturing not just logs, metrics, and traces, but the reasoning, tool usage, and decision paths behind agent behavior. You'll learn how to bring visibility into agent workflows, how OpenTelemetry semantic conventions help standardize telemetry, and how modern tools let your agents "talk back," so you can debug, understand, and trust what they're doing.

By the end, you will take away a practical workflow to instrument, trace, and interrogate agents—so your apps aren't operating in the dark.

Phil Miller

Secure Secrets in Next.js for Human and Non-Human Developers

Dealing with secret keys on its own can be a source of frustration. Add to that the complexity of hybrid rendering, multiple deployment environments, and AI coding agents and it becomes even more of a challenge. Phil will show you how to use varlock.dev to turn your .env files into a source of confidence and demonstrate how it can prevent secret leaks in your Next.js apps and beyond.

Seve Savoie Teruel

How I Ignored Reddit and Made a Steam Game Using React

Every want to build something but was told you shouldn't by "The Internet"? Me Too. Here's the story of how I chose to ignore those people and finally do the thing I've wanted to do since I was a kid, make a video game!

React Toronto Meetup: Agentic React apps, Secrets in Next.js and more!

Primary Photo for React Toronto

Hosted by

React Toronto

In-Person

Address available to attendees

👋 Hi React folks,

On September 29, we’re bringing the React community together in Toronto! 🎉
Expect an evening full of:
· Tech talks, pizza & drinks
· Fresh ideas and side-hustle projects
· Networking and great conversations with fellow devs

🗣 Call for Proposals
Have an idea or story to share? Submit your talk proposal through our CFP form and take the stage at one of our upcoming meetups!

🕑 Event Schedule

  • 18:00 - Doors open
  • 18:30 - Intro and announcements
  • 18:40 - How I Ignored Reddit and Made a Steam Game Using React by Seve Savoie Teruel
  • 19:05 - Make Agents Talk to You by Sergiy Dybskiy
  • 19:30 - Break with drinks
  • 19:45 - Secure Secrets in Next.js for Human and Non-Human Developers by Phil Miller
  • Mingle until 21:00

🤝 Supported by
This event made possible thanks to the support from React Advanced Toronto organizers – GitNation.

🤝 Hosted by
Kudos to our partner Super.com!

🤝 In collaboration with
Huge thanks to our friend Sentry!
Sentry is the only app monitoring platform built for developers that gets to the root cause for every issue. For software teams, Sentry is essential for monitoring application code quality. From Error tracking to Performance monitoring, developers can see clearer & solve quicker — from frontend to backend.

🙌 Special thanks
We’d also like to thank our friends at Toronto.js for their support in making this meetup happen.

👍 Code of Conduct
By registering for this event you agree to comply with our CoC

📩 Contact
s@serg.tech

Presentations

Sergiy Dybskiy

Make Agents Talk to You

Agentic React apps where UIs autonomously act, chain tool calls, and evolve state—bring complexity that traditional observability tools can't unravel. How do you actually understand what your agents are doing in production?

In this talk, we'll explore agent observability: capturing not just logs, metrics, and traces, but the reasoning, tool usage, and decision paths behind agent behavior. You'll learn how to bring visibility into agent workflows, how OpenTelemetry semantic conventions help standardize telemetry, and how modern tools let your agents "talk back," so you can debug, understand, and trust what they're doing.

By the end, you will take away a practical workflow to instrument, trace, and interrogate agents—so your apps aren't operating in the dark.

Phil Miller

Secure Secrets in Next.js for Human and Non-Human Developers

Dealing with secret keys on its own can be a source of frustration. Add to that the complexity of hybrid rendering, multiple deployment environments, and AI coding agents and it becomes even more of a challenge. Phil will show you how to use varlock.dev to turn your .env files into a source of confidence and demonstrate how it can prevent secret leaks in your Next.js apps and beyond.

Seve Savoie Teruel

How I Ignored Reddit and Made a Steam Game Using React

Every want to build something but was told you shouldn't by "The Internet"? Me Too. Here's the story of how I chose to ignore those people and finally do the thing I've wanted to do since I was a kid, make a video game!

Guild

Get in touch!

hi@guild.host