The  LGTM
  • Home
  • Agentic Coding
  • Claude Code
  • Codex
Sign in Subscribe
Cursor’s Rumored $50B Round Is What Happens When the IDE Becomes the Product Category
agentic-coding

Cursor’s Rumored $50B Round Is What Happens When the IDE Becomes the Product Category

A rumored $50 billion valuation for Cursor is the sort of number that makes otherwise serious people start speaking in either evangelism or eye-rolling. Both reactions miss the interesting part. The useful question is not whether the headline is absurd. Of course it is. The useful question is what investors
19 Apr 2026 5 min read
The App Store Is Getting a Vibe-Coding Supply Shock, and Apple Looks Understaffed for It
agentic-coding

The App Store Is Getting a Vibe-Coding Supply Shock, and Apple Looks Understaffed for It

Apple’s App Store has a supply-side problem now, and that is a very different problem from the one the industry spent the last two years arguing about. The loud prediction was that AI assistants would make apps less important by replacing them with chat. What actually seems to be
19 Apr 2026 5 min read
Claude Opus 4.7 Tops the Benchmarks, but the LLM Market Is Still Buying a Portfolio
llm-rankings

Claude Opus 4.7 Tops the Benchmarks, but the LLM Market Is Still Buying a Portfolio

Benchmarks are supposed to settle arguments. In the LLM market, they mostly start new ones. This week Anthropic grabbed the cleanest possible headline, with Claude Opus 4.7 landing at the top of both Arena Text and Arena Code, but the more useful story for people actually shipping software is
19 Apr 2026 5 min read
GitHub Copilot CLI 1.0.32 Fixes the Stuff That Actually Breaks Daily Use
codex

GitHub Copilot CLI 1.0.32 Fixes the Stuff That Actually Breaks Daily Use

GitHub Copilot CLI 1.0.32 is a maintenance release, which is another way of saying it is more revealing than a launch post. The AI coding market still loves dramatic demos: autonomous agents, parallel workflows, cross-model reviews, cloud execution, and all the rest. But daily usage does not break
19 Apr 2026 4 min read
OpenAI’s Latest Codex Alpha Is Quietly About Trust Boundaries, Not New Tricks
codex

OpenAI’s Latest Codex Alpha Is Quietly About Trust Boundaries, Not New Tricks

OpenAI’s latest Codex alpha is the kind of release most product marketing teams would hide in a changelog footer. That is exactly why it deserves attention. If you want to know where AI coding tools are actually heading, do not watch the glossy demos. Watch the commits that tighten
19 Apr 2026 4 min read
PydanticAI’s Tiny Patch Is a Good Reminder That Tool Contracts Are the Real Product
ai-frameworks

PydanticAI’s Tiny Patch Is a Good Reminder That Tool Contracts Are the Real Product

PydanticAI shipped v1.84.1 with two bug fixes. That is the whole release. No new runtime, no launch video, no benchmark chart with suspicious axis choices. Just one fix so internal output tools skip tool hooks, and another so hooks for single-BaseModel tools always receive dict-shaped validated arguments. On
18 Apr 2026 4 min read
OpenAI’s Agents SDK Keeps Getting More Valuable in the Most Boring Way Possible
ai-frameworks

OpenAI’s Agents SDK Keeps Getting More Valuable in the Most Boring Way Possible

OpenAI’s Agents SDK keeps getting more interesting in the least glamorous way possible. Version 0.14.2 is not a headline release about a new orchestration pattern or a flashy autonomous demo. It adds sandbox extra path grants, persists tool-origin metadata in run items, and ships a MongoDB session
18 Apr 2026 4 min read
LangChain’s ACP Patch Is Small, but It Says the Real Framework War Is Now About Interoperability
ai-frameworks

LangChain’s ACP Patch Is Small, but It Says the Real Framework War Is Now About Interoperability

Agent framework companies keep saying they want openness. Most of them mean export buttons, maybe an SDK, and a blog post about standards. LangChain’s deepagents-acp==0.0.6 is a much smaller release than that marketing language would suggest, but it lands closer to the real fault line. This
18 Apr 2026 4 min read
NVIDIA Wants Coding Agents to Stop Faking Computer-Vision Expertise
agentic-coding

NVIDIA Wants Coding Agents to Stop Faking Computer-Vision Expertise

NVIDIA’s latest DeepStream pitch is interesting for a reason that has almost nothing to do with the usual agent-demo theater. The company is not asking developers to marvel at a chatbot that scaffolded another todo app. It is trying to convince teams that coding agents can be useful inside
18 Apr 2026 5 min read
GitHub Quietly Exposed Sub-Agent Streaming in Copilot SDK, Which Tells You Where Agent UX Is Going
codex

GitHub Quietly Exposed Sub-Agent Streaming in Copilot SDK, Which Tells You Where Agent UX Is Going

The interesting changes in coding agents are increasingly the ones nobody outside product and platform teams notices. GitHub’s Saturday merge exposing includeSubAgentStreamingEvents across the Copilot SDK is a good example. It looks like a minor plumbing flag. It is not. It is a small but very clear signal that
18 Apr 2026 4 min read
OpenAI’s Claude Code Plugin Fix Is Small, but It Removes a Very Real Failure Mode
codex

OpenAI’s Claude Code Plugin Fix Is Small, but It Removes a Very Real Failure Mode

Interop between coding agents sounds elegant right up until the handoff path eats the job. That is the real story in OpenAI’s codex-plugin-cc v1.0.4 release. On paper, this is a routine patch for the plugin that lets Claude Code users call into Codex for review and rescue
18 Apr 2026 4 min read
openclaw

OpenClaw’s OpenAI-Compatible Gateway Is Finally Learning That Multimodal Means More Than Images

The industry has spent the last year slapping “OpenAI-compatible” onto every gateway with a JSON parser and a prayer. OpenClaw’s latest multimodal gateway work is interesting precisely because it suggests the team understands that compatibility has to mean more than accepting text and images while silently discarding everything else.
18 Apr 2026 3 min read
← Newer Posts Page 105 of 119 Older Posts →
The LGTM © 2026
  • Sign up
Powered by Ghost