
Big in big tech: AI agents now code alongside developers
Big Tech is doubling down on AI-powered coding agents—intelligent tools that go beyond assisting developers to actively collaborating with them. This week, Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI rolled out major upgrades that mark a shift in how software is built.
These agents don't just generate code—they fix bugs, add features, and increasingly understand developer intent. The result? Compressed timelines, reduced manual grunt work, and the beginning of a fundamental shift in how programming teams function.
Investors see software development as a high-fit application for
agentic AI
, or autonomous agents that can plan, execute, and self-correct across tasks. Coding, they believe, may be the killer use case.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Dhoni's Exclusive Home Interior Choice?
HomeLane
Get Quote
Undo
The week's biggest announcements:
Microsoft:
At its Build developer conference, Microsoft
unveiled a new GitHub Copilot agent
—a more proactive version of the AI tool that can now autonomously fix bugs and implement features. Instead of simply suggesting code snippets, the agent understands goals and acts on them.
Live Events
OpenAI:
A week earlier, OpenAI
introduced an upgraded version
of its coding model Codex. The new agent is designed to handle multiple programming tasks in parallel—bringing multitasking capabilities to code generation.
Discover the stories of your interest
Blockchain
5 Stories
Cyber-safety
7 Stories
Fintech
9 Stories
E-comm
9 Stories
ML
8 Stories
Edtech
6 Stories
Google DeepMind:
Released AlphaEvolve
, an advanced coding agent capable of tackling mathematical and computational problems. The system doesn't just generate code—it validates solutions using automated evaluators, reducing errors and hallucinations.
Why this matters
Coding appears to be the breakout application for agentic AI. Unlike creative writing or visual generation, software can be tested immediately—a program either runs or it doesn't. This gives developers a clear feedback loop, allowing faster refinement.
However, these tools still struggle with subtle logic errors and hallucinations. As they generate more code, the risk of flawed output also grows. Still, the productivity gains are substantial.
The shift is global
AI now writes a third of Microsoft and Google's code, according to the companies. Indian startups are following suit.
As reported by ET in April
, AI agents are generating between 40–80% of code at some early- and growth-stage companies, using tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.
From prototypes to production systems, AI-written code is speeding up delivery cycles and changing how software teams operate—possibly forever.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
17 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Why Canada made a u-turn on its contentious Digital Services Tax
In a bid to restart stalled trade negotiations with the United States, Canada scrapped its Digital Services Tax (DST) hours before it was due to take effect on Monday. Calling the DST 'a direct and blatant attack' on the US, President Donald Trump had on Friday announced the termination of all trade discussions with Canada. With the contentious tax out of the way, talks between Washington and Ottawa will likely resume. What was the DST? The DST was a 3% levy on the digital services revenue a firm made from Canadian users above $20 million in a calendar year. Controversially, the tax was set to be retroactively implemented beginning 2022. This would have had a significant impact on American technology giants such as Google, Meta, Apple, and Amazon — American tech companies would have had to pay roughly $2.7 billion to the Canadian government, if the tax were to be implemented, The New York Times had reported. 'The DST was announced in 2020 to address the fact that many large technology companies operating in Canada may not otherwise pay tax on revenues generated from Canadians…,' Canada's finance ministry said in its statement on Sunday. While the law had been passed earlier, payments were due from Monday. What does Canada's U-turn mean? Canada is the United States' second-largest trading partner after Mexico, and the largest buyer of US exports. It bought $349.4 billion of US goods and exported $412.7 billion to the US last year, according to US Census Bureau data. At the same time, it currently faces the steepest of Trump's tariffs: apart from the 10% base tariff imposed on most countries, Canada (and Mexico) face an additional 25% on all exports to the US, apparently meant to curb illegal immigration and stop fentanyl smuggling. Trump has also slapped 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada and 25% on auto imports. This makes getting a trade deal with the US a top priority for Canada. Scrapping the DST would help in this regard — Trump had been among its most vehement critics. Early indications are that Washington and Ottawa could meet the previously-set July 21 deadline for a trade agreement. Domestically, the U-turn is unlikely to hurt Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney, despite his election platform revolving around standing up to the US President. This is because the DST was not particularly popular in Canada either since it could have raised the cost of all kinds of digital services — from hailing cab rides to streaming movies. In fact, in recent months, many speculated that the tax's best purpose could be to serve as a bargaining chip in ongoing trade talks with the US.


New Indian Express
18 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
Sensex rise 118 points, Nifty 50 reaches 25,535; markets open higher on Tuesday
CHENNAI: Indian markets opened slightly higher on Tuesday, supported by gains in Asian equities and improved global sentiment ahead of the upcoming US tariff deadline on July 9. The Sensex rose 118 points to 83,724 at the opening bell, while the Nifty 50 added 18 points to reach 25,535. This positive start reflected a 0.6% rise in the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index and followed a strong finish on Wall Street, fueled by hopes of progress in U.S. trade talks. Meanwhile, oil prices edged lower on expectations of increased output from OPEC+—a welcome sign for India, which relies heavily on crude imports. Additionally, oil prices declined on expectations of an OPEC+ output increase—a favorable development for India, which is a major crude importer. The US dollar softened ahead of key US economic data and an upcoming vote on President Trump's fiscal reforms, which also supported emerging markets like India. On the domestic front, sentiment was supported by hopes for a breakthrough in India–US trade talks. Investors are closely watching for any early resolution ahead of the July 9 deadline. Among stocks in focus, Apollo Hospitals gained over 4% in early trade following news of a planned spin-off and listing of its digital health and pharmacy unit within the next 18–21 months. The parent company plans to retain a 15% stake in the new entity.


India Today
20 minutes ago
- India Today
Mark Zuckerberg announces Meta Superintelligence Labs and 11 new hires from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Monday announced the creation of Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL), a new division aimed at developing artificial general intelligence (AGI) – an AI system that can match or exceed human intelligence across a wide range of tasks. The new group will reportedly bring together Meta's foundational AI model teams, product teams, and the company's well-known Fundamental AI Research (FAIR) division. A new lab under MSL will also focus on building the next generation of large language models (LLMs).advertisementAt the helm of this ambitious project is Alexandr Wang, the former CEO of data-labelling startup Scale AI. Wang will serve as Meta's chief AI officer, a newly created role. In a memo to employees obtained by Bloomberg, Zuckerberg described Wang as 'the most impressive founder of his generation.' Wang will be joined by Nat Friedman, who was the former GitHub CEO; he will co-lead the division. Friedman's focus will be on developing AI products and applied research. Zuckerberg said the two leaders will steer Meta's efforts to reach the next frontier in artificial intelligence.'As the pace of AI progress accelerates, developing superintelligence is coming into sight,' Zuckerberg reportedly wrote in his internal note to staff. 'I believe this will be the beginning of a new era for humanity, and I am fully committed to doing what it takes for Meta to lead the way.'advertisement According to reports, Zuckerberg has been personally leading the hiring campaign for MSL. He apparently offered generous packages and hosted many of the potential hires at his home. However, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's claims of Meta offering a $100 million signing bonus were dismissed by the Meta company recently invested $14.3 billion in Scale AI, bringing in some of its staff, including Wang. Meta has also been in talks with AI startups like Perplexity AI and Runway, and is expected to acquire PlayAI, a small company focused on voice replication using the most talked-about aspect of this overhaul was Meta poaching people from its competitors like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. According to a report by Bloomberg, Meta has hired 11 top-tier AI researchers from its rivals. Wired has listed all the new hired that Zuckerberg's company has done for MSL, which includes Trapit Bansal, who was the co-creator of OpenAI's o-series models, Shuchao Bi, who was involved in GPT-4o voice and multimodal post-training, Huiwen Chang, who is known for developing image generation tools at Google Research, Ji Lin, who was a contributor to multiple GPT-4 models and reasoning systems, Joel Pobar, who was with Meta earlier and has just returned from Anthropic after a short stint, along with Jack Rae, Johan Schalkwyk and Pei Sun from Google, and Hongyu Ren, Jiahui Yu and Shengjia Zhao from launch of the superintelligence labs reflects Zuckber's long-term commitment to AI. And Meta isn't alone. The move echoes industry-wide trends. This year alone, Microsoft spent $650 million acquiring much of Inflection AI's team, while Amazon has hired key staff from Adept. - Ends