There is a dangerous conflation happening across our industry right now. Teams are plugging LLM-powered agents into their deployment pipelines, calling it “agentic CI/CD,” and treating it as the next logical step after shell scripts and Terraform modules. It is not. Automation executes predefined instructions. An agent reasons about context, makes decisions, and takes actions that were never explicitly coded. If we continue treating intelligent agents like scripts, we will fail to build the necessary governance layer that defines this next era of CI/CD. That difference is not semantic. It is architectural, operational, and, if you get it wrong, catastrophic. Think about what happens when your Terraform plan runs. It reads state, computes a diff, and presents you with a deterministic set of changes. You review. You approve. You apply. The blast radius is knowable. Now think about what happens when an AI agent decides to scale down a service because it interpreted a cost anomaly as a ...
For most of its short life, Claude has lived inside a chat window. You type, it responds. That model is changing fast. Anthropic recently expanded Claude Code and Claude Cowork with a new computer use capability that lets the AI directly control your Mac or Windows desktop — clicking, typing, opening applications, navigating browsers, and completing workflows on your behalf. It’s available now as a research preview for Pro and Max subscribers. The short version: Claude can now do things at your desk while you’re somewhere else. How it Actually Works Claude doesn’t reach for the mouse first. It prioritizes existing connectors to services like Slack or Google Calendar. When no connector is available, it steps up to browser control. Only when those options don’t apply does it take direct control of the desktop — navigating through UI elements the way a human would. Claude always requests permission before accessing any new application, and users can halt operations at any point. T...