AI-assisted coding tools are getting a meaningful upgrade. Cursor has released Composer 2.5, the latest version of its proprietary coding agent model, and the improvements go well beyond a version bump. Composer 2.5 is described as a substantial improvement in intelligence and behavior over its predecessor, Composer 2. It handles sustained work on long-running tasks better, follows complex instructions more reliably, and is easier to work with overall. For development teams already using Cursor or evaluating AI coding tools, that combination matters. Raw capability is one thing. But an agent that can stay on task across a lengthy workflow — without drifting, hallucinating tool calls, or needing constant correction — is a different story. Built on Open-Source Foundations Composer 2.5 is built on the same open-source checkpoint as Composer 2, Moonshot’s Kimi K2.5. That’s worth noting because it reflects a broader trend in the AI industry: frontier-quality capabilities are ...
Reactive autoscaling is a critical safety net . Demand rises, metrics spike, policies trigger, and capacity increases. But flash-crowd events, product drops, major campaigns, and limited-inventory moments do not ramp. They cliff. Users arrive at once, and reactive scaling is structurally late because “scale triggered” is only the start of the journey to usable capacity. If your demand spike arrives faster than your system can warm up, reactive scaling will lag no matter how well you tune it. The fix is planning and verification: scale before the event and prove the system is ready before customers arrive. This article outlines a practitioner approach: schedule-aware, tier-based predictive scaling using capacity targets and an executor that verifies readiness. Why Reactive Scaling Loses Against Flash Crowds Reactive scaling assumes: Demand ramps gradually enough to be detected early. Signals (CPU, request rate, latency) change soon enough to trigger action. Pro...