Undo today revealed that its platform for recording interactions within applications can now be accessed by artificial intelligence (AI) agents via a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. Company CEO Greg Law said this Undo AI capability makes it simpler for any agent to discover the root cause of any issue that otherwise would have required weeks or months to discover. That capability is now more critical than ever at a time when AI tools are generating massive amounts of code that is overwhelming the ability of humans to actually review, he added. The Undo platform records the complete execution of a program, including every instruction, variable, thread event and system call. That approach captures causality in a way that is deeper than what can be diagnosed solely by relying on log analytics and traces, said Law. An AI agent can then query the recording in the same way they reason about static code to determine exactly how an application functions, he added. Armed with those ins...
Microsoft has moved the Azure SDK for Rust out of beta and into general availability, giving Rust developers a stable, production-ready way to connect to core Azure services. The release covers Core, Identity, Key Vault (Secrets, Keys, and Certificates), and Storage (Blobs and Queues), built around the same design patterns already used in the .NET, Java, JavaScript, Python, Go, and C++ SDKs. The announcement came as part of Microsoft’s May 2026 Azure SDK release, and was detailed separately in a post from Ronnie Geraghty, product manager for the Azure SDK. He framed the milestone with a simple scenario: a Rust service that signs in with Microsoft Entra ID, retrieves a signing key from Key Vault, pulls work items from a Storage Queue, and writes the results to Blob Storage. Every piece of that chain is now stable. That stability matters more than it might sound. A beta SDK is fine for experimentation, but most engineering teams won’t put it in front of production traffic. W...