Modern software delivery has crossed a threshold where speed is no longer the differentiator, but a stress test for the entire engineering system. AI-assisted development has created a new baseline expectation where features, fixes and even architectural changes can be generated in minutes rather than days. This acceleration feels like progress, yet it exposes a structural weakness that has been building for years inside DevOps practices. Traditional DevOps was designed around human-paced iteration cycles. Code was written, reviewed, tested and deployed in relatively predictable sequences. AI changes this rhythm entirely by compressing multiple stages of development into a single generative step. A developer can now produce what looks like a complete service, including tests and infrastructure definitions, in one session. The pipeline is no longer dealing with incremental change, but with sudden bursts of high-volume transformation. This creates an operational paradox. Systems are f...
GitHub Copilot Bills Hit $800: Visual Studio’s June Update Adds Real-Time Usage Alerts and MCP Trust Checks
Microsoft’s June Stable Channel update for Visual Studio landed on two things developers have been asking for all year: A clearer view of what their Copilot habit actually costs, and a way to know whether an MCP server has quietly changed under the hood. Both features answer real pain points that surfaced in the past few months, not hypothetical ones. The Billing Shock That Started It All On June 1, GitHub moved every Copilot plan from premium request units to usage-based billing, calculated by token consumption rather than request count. Base plan prices didn’t change, but the way usage is metered did, and the shift meant users would be charged based on how many tokens they burn as they work, rather than a low flat rate per request. The reaction was loud. Some developers reported their monthly bills climbing from around $29 to nearly $750, and other reports of heavy agentic users have their costs surging from $39 to over $800 a month. Whether that’s a fair reflecti...