Amazon Web Services (AWS) today made available a preview of an artificial intelligence (AI) agent that has been trained to continuously modernize codebases. Announced at the AWS New York Summit , the AI agent is being embedded into AWS Transform , the application modernization service AWS launched last year. Sriram Devanathan, director of AWS Transform, said the autonomous AI agent added to the service will, unlike existing agents, asynchronously execute tasks such as remediating code or analyzing technical debt. AWS Transform automatically scans your code repositories against configurable baselines and generates findings in hours. Policies for detecting end-of-life dependencies, deprecated frameworks, and other common sources of technical debt are already embedded. If a DevOps team has deprecated an internal library or prefers a particular logging pattern, it can be codified as a policy that runs continuously across code repositories. Once an issue is detected, AI agents will auton...
Here is a situation most engineering leaders recognize. You roll out AI coding tools. Features ship faster. Developers are more productive. Then, a few months in, you realize something unexpected: the engineers you most wanted to free up are busier than ever. They are reviewing PRs, firefighting regressions, juggling a dozen half-shipped features and the edge cases that came with each one. AI made them more efficient. It also made them ten times more busy. The bottleneck did not disappear. It moved. And it moved to exactly the place most teams are least equipped to handle quickly: verification. This is the problem that CI/CD, in its current form, is not set up to solve on its own. CI/CD is a delivery mechanism. It runs what you give it. If you give it a pipeline that still depends on humans to write tests, review logic, and triage failures, adding AI on the generation side just means the human verification step gets hit harder. You are filling a faster funnel into the same narrow dr...