Today's useful thread is safer ways to use agents at work and more useful business automation. These updates point to agents becoming easier to trust, connect, and put into everyday work instead of staying as demos.
What changed: Anthropic doubled Claude Code’s five-hour usage limits for Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based Enterprise plans, removed peak-hour reductions for Pro and Max, and raised Claude API limits for Opus models after adding SpaceX compute capacity, according to Ars Technica’s report on the announcement.
Why it matters: If you build with coding agents, the practical ceiling just moved up: longer debugging runs, larger refactors, and more parallel experimentation should hit fewer artificial stops. For small teams, that can mean fewer handoffs back to a human just because the agent ran out of quota mid-task.
Try/watch: Revisit any Claude Code workflows you kept short because of limits, but still track weekly usage and cost; more capacity can also make runaway agent loops more expensive.
What changed: Cursor 3.3 added a context usage breakdown so users can see how much of an agent’s working memory is being consumed by rules, skills, MCP connections, and subagents.
Why it matters: This is a practical debugging feature for agent builders. When a coding agent behaves poorly, the cause is often not “bad AI” but too much irrelevant context, conflicting rules, or overloaded integrations.
Try/watch: Open a few real agent sessions and look for bloated rules or integrations that are eating context without improving results. Tightening those inputs may be cheaper than switching models.
What changed: Collibra launched AI Command Center to monitor and control AI systems and agents across their lifecycle, including ownership, behavior, decisions, and risk signals. The company also announced a Giskard partnership for testing and validation, plus agent assessment templates aligned with AI UC-1 standards.
Why it matters: As agents move from drafting answers to taking actions, leaders need a way to know what is deployed, who owns it, what data it uses, and when it drifts. This is especially relevant for regulated companies and for any business letting agents touch customer, financial, or operational systems.
Try/watch: Before scaling agents, create a simple inventory: agent name, owner, connected systems, allowed actions, review process, and failure plan. Tools like this are most useful when the operating discipline already exists.
Today's useful thread is safer ways to use agents at work and more useful business automation. These updates point to agents becoming easier to trust, connect, and put into everyday work instead of staying as demos.
What changed: HPE announced new self-driving network capabilities across HPE Mist and HPE Aruba Central, including agents that can optimize capacity, remediate missing VLAN configuration issues, protect against rogue DHCP servers, and address roaming problems. HPE also cited the UK Ministry of Justice as saying the approach contributed to an approximate 75% reduction in service desk tickets.
Why it matters: This is agentic AI applied to infrastructure operations, where the buyer benefit is fewer tickets and faster fixes rather than better chat. For small IT teams and managed service providers, networking may become one of the cleaner agent use cases because actions are repeatable and outcomes are visible.
Try/watch: Before enabling autonomous fixes, require a “dry run” phase that shows what the system would change and what impact it expects.
What changed: UiPath released agentic AI capabilities for UiPath Automation Suite, aimed at public-sector agencies and regulated industries that need cloud-hosted or self-hosted model options. The update covers UiPath Maestro, Agent Builder, GenAI Activities, and context grounding for agentic workflows inside customer-controlled infrastructure.
Why it matters: This matters for organizations that cannot send sensitive data to a public cloud AI service but still want agents to help with back-office work. It also signals that traditional automation vendors are repositioning from “bots that follow scripts” to agents that can interpret context while staying inside stricter data boundaries.
Try/watch: Use this for internal workflows with strong audit needs—case intake, benefits processing, document routing—but keep a human approval step for exceptions and citizen-impacting decisions.
What changed: Five Eyes cybersecurity agencies warned that agentic AI should be adopted cautiously, especially when agents can take actions across business systems. The guidance, as reported by ITPro, says organizations should consider simpler automation for repetitive tasks where possible and assume agentic systems may behave unexpectedly until security practices and evaluation methods mature.
Why it matters: This is the counterweight to every launch above: the more useful an agent is, the more permissions it usually needs. Founders and buyers should make risk containment part of procurement, not an afterthought.
Try/watch: For every agent, document its allowed actions, data access, escalation rules, logs, and shutoff plan before deployment.
Five Eyes Agencies Issue Critical Warning on AI Agents
Security agencies from Five Eyes (US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) released urgent guidance warning that rapid rollouts of agentic AI are too risky. These self-operating AI systems can malfunction and cause major damage. The agencies recommend deploying AI agents slowly and carefully, starting with low-risk tasks and keeping humans in control.
Google Announces Free AI Agents Training
Google is launching a 5-day AI Agents Intensive course starting next month, teaching the latest techniques for building autonomous AI systems. The course requires basic Python knowledge and covers "agentic workflow" practices. While foundational materials are free, advanced content may require payment.
Your Next Move: If you're considering AI agents for your work, start with the Five Eyes security checklist first to avoid costly mistakes. Then explore Google's course to understand what's actually possible.
Salesforce just restructured as an agent-first platform. The company announced Headless 360, making every workflow, object, and business logic accessible through APIs, MCP tools, and CLI commands. Your AI agents now have full Salesforce data access with inherited permissions—same as human users. The browser UI is optional.
Inference is the new inflection point. AI adoption has shifted from training new models to serving them efficiently. This drives opportunities for specialized AI chips, making agent responses faster and cheaper to run. If you're deploying agents, watch inference costs drop.
AI moved from promise to operational reality, with emerging challenges: data center demands and managing systems at scale.
For builders: Salesforce opened its full platform to agents. For operators: inference competition is accelerating your cost advantage.
Tech News Digest
Centaur AI Mimics Human Thinking - New Centaur AI model simulates human thinking across 160 different tasks, with potential to transform AI capabilities. Researchers highlight critical concerns about privacy, job displacement, and automated decision-making.
Healthcare AI Detects ADHD Early - Duke University developed AI that accurately identifies ADHD in young children using data from 140,000+ kids aged five and older, enabling earlier interventions and family support.
Tech Stock Volatility Despite Strong Results - Meta stock dropped 2.5% after-hours despite reporting fastest revenue growth since 2021; Amazon shares fell 3% despite exceeding cloud growth expectations. Rising AI infrastructure costs concern investors.
Startup Funding Accelerates - 137 Ventures raised $700 million to invest in innovative AI and defense sector companies.
Global Supply Chain Disruptions Widen - Supply chain issues now impact over 300 industries worldwide, creating production delays and higher consumer prices.
Your AI can now run tasks without asking permission. Three major platforms just activated autonomous agents: Salesforce opened its system so agents execute workflows directly, Cloudflare lets agents deploy applications on their own, and Microsoft launched Agent 365 to automate enterprise work.
The New Generation of AI: OpenAI released GPT-5.5, Anthropic shipped Claude Opus 4.7, and both power workflows that complete complex tasks automatically. Adobe agents now finish creative projects across Photoshop, Illustrator, and Premiere without you switching between apps.
One Big Problem: 79% of companies adopted AI agents, but only 2% fully deployed them. The reason? 55% of leaders worry about reliability and errors. Autonomous agents still need safety guardrails.
Your Competitive Advantage: Companies using agents already handle 52% more work per employee without hiring more people. In insurance, agents eliminate 80% of boring paperwork, freeing humans to close deals.
Act Now: If competitors deploy agents first, they'll automate routine work while your team does it manually. The advantage goes to whoever moves first.
Palo Alto Networks is acquiring Portkey, a security system for AI agents. Portkey protects autonomous agents that process trillions of tokens monthly—critical data moving through company systems.
The challenge: AI agents now operate like powerful employees with special access. Without security, they become targets for attacks.
What Portkey delivers:
Result: 99.99% uptime and safety for autonomous agents. The deal closes Q4 2026.
In parallel, Amazon launched enterprise AI workplace tools combining cloud infrastructure with software solutions.
What you need to do: If your organization deploys AI agents, prioritize security planning now. Uncontrolled AI agents create serious risks.
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