Agentic AI is rapidly entering DevOps pipelines, platform engineering platforms and cloud-native infrastructure. DevOps Experience 2026 brings the community together to decide which tools matter, how they should be governed and what comes next. The DevOps ecosystem is entering one of its most consequential transitions since the rise of CI/CD. Across the industry, vendors are racing to introduce agentic AI systems designed to automate DevOps workflows. These systems promise to assist with everything from pipeline orchestration and incident response to infrastructure management and security remediation. The promise is compelling: faster delivery, less operational toil and smarter automation. But alongside that promise comes a new set of questions DevOps teams are now actively trying to answer. Which agentic AI tools should we trust in our pipelines? What decisions should those agents actually be allowed to make? How do we monitor and govern systems that can operate autonomousl...
The Eclipse Foundation today announced it will make available a managed instance of the Open VSX Registry available to industry partners for a fee. Thabang Mashologu, chief marketing officer and head of products at the Eclipse Foundation, said the Open VSX Managed Registry provides an economically sustainable approach to providing access to a registry that is now widely invoked within application development workflows that incorporate tools based on open source VS Code. Initial customers of the Open VSX Managed Registry include Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google, and Cursor, which will continue to incorporate the registry in the services they provide application developers. That approach provides a means to support application development teams using those tools without requiring them to sign up for an additional service provided by the Eclipse Foundation. That registry maintained by the Eclipse Foundation has been consuming significant infrastructure resources as more AI coding to...