AI Agents Gain Ground in Software Development, While Google Hints at Chromebook End Date
Apple integrated Anthropic's Claude and OpenAI's Codex into Xcode 26.3, its flagship developer tool, signaling a major push into "agentic coding," according to VentureBeat. The update, announced Tuesday, allows AI systems to autonomously write code, build projects, run tests, and visually verify their own work with minimal human oversight. Meanwhile, Google court filings suggested ChromeOS has an expiration date in 2034, Ars Technica reported.
Xcode 26.3, immediately available as a release candidate, represents Apple's most significant embrace of AI-assisted software development since introducing intelligence features in Xcode, VentureBeat noted. The move reflects a growing trend of integrating AI agents into enterprise workflows. Asana CPO Arnab Bose stated at a recent VB event in San Francisco that shared memory and context are key to successful AI agents within an enterprise, providing detailed history and direct access from the get-go with guardrail checkpoints and human oversight. "This way, when you assign a task, you're not having to go ahead and re-provide all of the context about how your business works," Bose said.
Asana launched Asana AI Teammates last year, embracing the philosophy that AI agents should be plugged directly into a team or project to create a collaborative system, VentureBeat reported. The project management company has fully integrated with the concept of AI as an active teammate, rather than a passive add-on.
In other tech news, Google's shift to Android PCs means Chromebooks have an expiration date in 2034, according to newly uncovered court documents filed as part of Google's long-running search antitrust case, which began in 2020 and reached a verdict in 2024, Ars Technica reported. While Google is still seeking to have the guilty verdict overturned, it has escaped most of the remedies that government prose. Chromebooks debuted 16 years ago with the limited release of Google's Cr-48 and became one of the most popular budget computing options and a common fixture in schools and businesses.
The rise of AI agents extends beyond software development. Matt Schlicht, who runs the ecommerce assistant Octane AI, launched Moltbook, an experimental social network designed just for AI agents to post, comment, and follow each other while humans simply observe, Wired reported. The social network for bots mirrors the user interface of a stripped-down Reddit and quickly grew in prominence among the AI community.
Discussion
AI Experts & Community
Be the first to comment