It wasn’t that long ago that AI assistants just watched from the sidelines. They could answer your questions, explain how things worked, sum up logs, and write deployment scripts. Handy, sure, but the real decisions? Still up to the engineers. That’s changing now. AI agents are stepping right into the heartbeat of operations. They can peek into monitoring platforms, tweak cloud settings, kick off deployments, change configs, restart services, you name it. For a lot of teams, giving AI this kind of access feels like the next obvious step in automation. If an AI finds a problem, why not let it fix it? If it can see a deployment fail, why not just roll things back automatically? If it spots resources running low, let it bump them up. On paper, it makes perfect sense. But here’s the catch. Production environments never really stick to the script. As AI agents start mixing directly with ops, DevOps folks find themselves in a new era. The hard part isn’t just what these agents can do. It...
Chinese AI developer Z.ai has introduced ZCode, a desktop application that automates software development tasks, positioning the platform to compete with established coding platforms from Anthropic, GitHub and Cursor. The company built ZCode, which it calls an Agentic Development Environment, around its recently released GLM-5.2 LLM. Rather than functioning as a traditional coding assistant that responds to individual prompts, the software manages multi-step development projects by planning work, modifying code, running validation tests and running successive tasks with limited user intervention. Available for Windows, macOS and Linux, ZCode also supports third-party AI models through bring-your-own-key configurations. Developers can monitor long-running coding sessions from mobile devices through integrations with WeChat, Feishu and Telegram, while high-privilege actions require user approval before execution. Z.ai is pairing the launch with aggressive pricing and promotional offer...