The Old Pipeline Had Too Many Doors. You started in Figma. Then opened Android Studio. Wrote Kotlin, argued with Gradle, wired Firebase manually, deployed a web dashboard through Netlify with a separate CI config — and repeated this every time a stakeholder changed their mind about a button color. Each tool lived on its own island. Every handoff cost momentum. The pipeline wasn't broken. It was just too long. In 2026, that pipeline collapsed. Not because someone built a magic all-in-one tool, but because the tools you already use — Android Studio, Firebase, Netlify, and Figma — finally started talking to each other through agents, automation, and shared deployment context. And if your stack already touches all four, you're holding a setup most developers haven't fully wired yet. Android Studio Stopped Being an IDE. The shift is real: you can now build a working app prototype from a single prompt.…