The Kilo Code acquisition complements Anaconda’s Python roots, but it also reveals a larger ambition: Moving up the AI stack before the value—and the developer relationship—moves beyond it. Anaconda announced this week that it is acquiring Kilo Code, and the announcement arrived wrapped in enough AI marketing language to fill several context windows. There is a “tokenpocalypse.” Enterprises are “token-maxxing.” CIOs are being asked whether they know where their data is. Anaconda and Kilo, meanwhile, are promising “AI on your own terms.” Let’s strip all of that away. The deal is important enough without the promotional wrapping. Kilo Code is an open-source, model-agnostic coding agent used by more than 3 million developers. According to the companies, it orchestrates nearly 10 trillion tokens per month and can route work across more than 500 models. It operates inside VS Code, JetBrains and the command line, placing it directly where developers and AI agents increasingly perform the...
AI has moved very quickly from experimentation to production. A few years ago, many organizations were still asking whether AI could improve their products or internal workflows. Today, the question is different: how can teams ship AI-enabled software safely, reliably, and responsibly? That shift matters because AI is no longer just a research project or a boardroom talking point. It is being added to customer support platforms, fraud detection systems, developer tools, compliance workflows, cloud operations, marketing engines, and enterprise applications. The opportunity is real, but so is the risk. Traditional software usually behaves in predictable ways. If the logic is written correctly, the same input should produce the same output. AI systems are different. A generative AI feature may produce useful answers one moment and questionable answers the next. A model can hallucinate, misread context, expose sensitive information, or make recommendations that sound confident but are wr...