A global survey of 2,501 IT and DevOps professionals at organizations with more than 150 employees published today finds more than two-thirds (68%) work for organizations that have implemented artificial intelligence (AI) across some or all their software delivery workflows. Conducted by Tricentis, a provider of a platform for testing software, the survey identifies enhanced quality and risk detection (37%), enhanced accuracy and consistency (36%) and improved test automation coverage (32%) as the top benefits of integrating AI into those workflows Overall, 53% manage between six and ten AI or automation tools across their software development lifecycle (SDLC). However, the survey also finds that 60% admit their application developers also regularly ship untested code into production environments. David Colwell, vice president of AI and machine learning at Tricentis, said that as more AI-generated code is created, the volume of code that has not been tested is increasing, which in ...
Microsoft just shipped Intelligent Terminal 0.1 — an open-source, experimental fork of Windows Terminal with native agent integration built in. It’s available now from the Microsoft Store or via WinGet ( winget install Microsoft.IntelligentTerminal ), and it installs alongside your existing Windows Terminal without replacing it. This is an early release, clearly labeled as experimental. But it’s a meaningful signal about where Microsoft thinks the terminal is going. What it Actually Does The core idea is straightforward: Instead of copying an error message, opening a browser, hunting through Stack Overflow, and then jumping back to your shell, you stay in the terminal. An AI agent is right there, aware of what’s on your screen. Intelligent Terminal adds a persistent agent pane — a docked, context-aware panel where you can interact with an AI agent CLI without leaving your workflow. GitHub Copilot CLI is the default, but the architecture is open. Any Agent Client Pr...