Elon Musk’s SpaceX has struck a deal with artificial intelligence (AI) coding sensation Cursor that gives SpaceX the right to acquire the startup for $60 billion later this year or, alternatively, pay $10 billion for a collaborative partnership. The announcement, made Tuesday via Musk’s social media platform X, positions the newly formed “SpaceXAI” to challenge industry titans OpenAI and Anthropic. “SpaceXAI and @cursor_ai are now working closely together to create the world’s best coding and knowledge work AI,” the company said. By folding Cursor into the SpaceX ecosystem, Musk is not just building a rocket company; he is attempting to construct a vertically integrated AI powerhouse capable of outcoding the very competitors he helped create, according to industry watchers. “Elon Musk is attempting to warp space and time to leap ahead in the AI race,” said Mitch Ashley, vice president and practice lead, Software Engineering Cycle, at The Futurum Group. “The SpaceX-Cursor arrangem...
The demos look super cool! An AI agent detects a failing deployment, rolls it back, opens a GitHub issue, and notifies Slack — all before the on-call engineer has finished reading the alert. If you’ve been following the DevOps tooling space over the last 18 months, you’ve probably seen some version of this pitch. But here’s the honest question: How much of this is actually running in production today, and how much is still a well-staged conference demo? This article cuts through the noise. We’ll look at what AI agents in DevOps actually are, where they’re delivering real value right now, where they’re falling flat, and what teams need to think carefully about before giving an agent the keys to their infrastructure. What We Mean by “AI Agents” in DevOps Before we can separate hype from reality, we need to agree on what an AI agent actually is in this context — because the term is used to describe everything from a glorified LLM wrapper to a sophisticated multi-step autonomous syst...