
TypeScript 6 Ships, Agents Remember, IDEs Panic Quietly
TypeScript 6.0 is officially out — native ES module output by default, sweeping type system upgrades, and a must-read before it starts appearing in your dependency trees. The big AI debate this week: Daniel Miessler builds the most complete argument yet for why AI will replace knowledge work — and somehow makes it sound like good news. Meanwhile, Addy Osmani makes the case that agentic orchestration is already eating the IDE's lunch — if your workflow still centers on a code window, this might be the signal you've been waiting for. On the agent tooling front: Simon Willison breaks down Claude Code's new auto mode, which removes permission friction and quietly redefines what "agentic" means in daily practice. Mozilla dropped an open standard for shared agent learning called cq — so agents can stop rediscovering the same failures in parallel. And Cog bakes persistent memory and self-reflection directly into Claude Code projects, because amnesia is a terrible trait in a coding assistant.
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