• roetlich 3 hours ago

Who would have thought that git worktree is the technology of the year 2026?

• kirtivr 2 hours ago

Yeah, when you had multiple agents working on the same machine, branch isolation was no longer sufficient.

A repository folder can only be on one branch at a time.

A worktree is basically equivalent to a cp -R + git branch, which allows this new workflow to occur.

I loved this particular historical insight as to why `git worktree` was added in 2015:

Before worktrees, kernel devs faced a major inconvenience when switching contexts, e.g., stopping feature work to fix an urgent bug on a release branch.

Running git stash and switching branches alters timestamps on thousands of files.

This forces `make` to perform a full re-compile, which can take up to an hour on large kernels.

• baq 7 minutes ago

How small are people’s projects if they find worktrees useful? I use them for hobby stuff, but $DAYJOB is a different story because of testing

• _fat_santa 4 minutes ago

I've toyed around with worktrees but haven't found them very useful beyond that. I generally find it much easier to carefully prompt an agent so $TASK1 does not interfere with $TASK2

• mohamedkoubaa 14 minutes ago

I set up multiple work trees in one vscode workspace last year and wrote in the agents.md how to merge branches - but I spend about a third of the time helping agents integrate and merge. I remember wishing the tooling would catch up

• mrklol 2 hours ago

And the team behind opencode is working on an alternative https://github.com/anomalyco/rift

• keeda 42 minutes ago

Hah, I have a prototype of the same idea on my backburner! Excited to see this, though I don't understand some of their design choices. Will need to check out more closely.

• mgambati 2 hours ago

Gitbutler still a better option than any worktree like variant

• parisiansam 40 minutes ago

I have moved from my own awkward scripts to lazyworktree TUI and I loved it

• carterschonwald an hour ago

i have some fun experiments i'm doing with full virtualization middle ware of all sys calls for agents tools/shell commands/io, still far from daily driver, but allows me to do a very rich overlay / virtual file system tom foolery in place

• epolanski 33 minutes ago

I can barely keep up with one single thread and branch, go figure.

• john_builds 16 minutes ago

best tool yet!

• junto 27 minutes ago

As a side note, has anyone else noticed that GitHub have leaked what looks like a sequential customer number on their Billing - Usage page?

Go here and you’ll be redirected with a query string including a customer parameter. That looks like trouble.

https://github.com/settings/billing/usage

• free652 12 minutes ago

That information is public https://api.github.com/users/<username>

• lawilli 16 minutes ago

I just see a 404, though I’m not signed in.

• sccxy an hour ago

Looks good, but after pricing change I have already used 26% this month with very light usage.

Last month I used Copilot heavily, much much more than I usually do, but did not manage to use more than 58%.

• epolanski 32 minutes ago

Use less effort and thus tokens.

I swear I did few tests and it's rare you need more than medium on mundane job work.

• Lalabadie 2 hours ago

That looks pretty close in shape to the early Ace project Maggie Appleton demonstrated last month.

Edit: This short talk – https://maggieappleton.com/zero-alignment

• user43928 an hour ago

I was thinking of the Codex app.

Particularly the left sidebar and conversation view look near identically structured.

• CharlieDigital 2 hours ago

I rather like Ace better because the key problem right now is teams not working together and shipping the wrong things. When AI can generate the code, then it feels like product should be bringing the functional vocabulary and grammar while the engineering team provides the technical grammar to build the right thing.

This app is just another "let me talk to product, copy their convo, go off and build this in isolation with an agent" which I think is directionally wrong.

The "rooms" or "streams" should be multi-player instead of product looking at it at the end saying "no, go fix that" and dev copies text from one source and pastes into another.

• arusahni 2 hours ago

Oh nice! I guess they're back to features after finishing tackling their availability issues [1].

[1]: https://github.blog/news-insights/company-news/an-update-on-...

• devmor 29 minutes ago

I noticed the availability issues dropped off really fast in line with the pricing hike!

• matthew_hre 3 hours ago

Unrelated to the feature itself, but remember a few months ago when someone posted Github's beta feature for stacked PRs, and a ton of people slammed them for releasing a seemingly vibe-coded site? To quote Mitchell Hashimoto, "One of the most requested GitHub features in years and the website looks like it was designed by someone 9 years into a 2 year community college program."[1]

When opening the posted link, my first thought was "imagine if the stacked PRs site had the same amount of effort put into it as the Github Copilot App site". They clearly have other preview features on this site already, so maybe I'm just confused on why stacked PRs got some b-grade announcement site. The obvious answer is "copilot", but I'm still curious.

[1] https://x.com/mitchellh/status/2043788123008868600

• Anon1096 2 hours ago

Target market for stacked PRs are ICs who don't have much decision making power and let's be real do not care too much about the look and feel of a "launch site" for the feature. It's also something few if anyone is making a purchasing decision over.

Target market for copilot includes people with actual purchasing power and also many new users where this is an actual make or break feature. So this is worth the investment into design while stacked PRs is questionable. I actually question why they bothered with anything more than a blog post at all for stacked PRs (looking at the post it doesn't seem like too too much more than a blog post though).

• inerte 2 hours ago

I know it has the same functionality, but it also looks like the Codex app which looks like Cursor Agents! Are they sharing some VS Code primitive here?

• grim_io 2 hours ago

How is this different than the separate Agents app shipping with VS Code?

Other than fewer features.

• virtualcharles an hour ago

I’m wondering the same thing, I’m not sure what the purpose of each is?

• siva7 2 hours ago

what app?

• virtualcharles an hour ago

In VS Code they’ve added Agent View, which acts like a separate app and looks pretty much identical to this.

• qrush an hour ago

More evidence that GitHub is chasing features over stability of their platform.

• 2001zhaozhao 3 hours ago

It's kind of interesting that everyone is going for the desktop app format now.

These desktop agentic coding tools are a large UX step up from the CLIs, but I still think the future is going to be remote development as the coding agents start running for hours at a time. Building a desktop app seems short-sighted as it would just lock them out of the remote option completely.

• dangoor 2 hours ago

You can get to it wherever you want. Copilot CLI is pretty great: https://github.com/features/copilot/cli

There's support in VS Code and Jetbrains IDEs. You can access your agent sessions on the web.

(I work at GitHub, but not on Copilot)

• 8n4vidtmkvmk 2 hours ago

Doesn't lock you out at all. Codex already had a companion app for mobile so you can send prompts to your desktop app while you go about your business. The infrastructure is there. Server might move from your desktop to cloud at some point but not much changes. Still needs somewhere to run.

• panos_news 2 hours ago

I think their goal is to lock you into their ecosystem instead of using your IDE

• jollyllama 2 hours ago

They want all your data. A browser doesn't get them that as well.

• wuliwong an hour ago

But now is now, and what you are talking about is a future that may or may not exist.

• hootz 2 hours ago

The desktop app can become a client for their remote cloud agent solution (yuck).

• dist-epoch 2 hours ago

Codex App can spawn/control Codex agents running in the cloud.

• free652 an hour ago

looks like google antigravity 2.0, a standalone app instead of a vscode plugin.

• solomatov 2 hours ago

So, it's not open source?

• Zambyte an hour ago

Is that a surprise? When has GitHub been known for Open Source?

• solomatov 19 minutes ago

Personally, I thought about it as next gen vscode

• fnord77 10 minutes ago

[delayed]

• dominotw an hour ago

copilot had such a lead when this whole ai coding thing started. what happened?

• ex-aws-dude an hour ago

Too slow on the move to agents

Plus the whole naming confused people

I still talk to co-workers who think claude code == agents and copilot is just VS autocomplete

• cute_boi 38 minutes ago

Microslop bureaucracy + leadership politics.

• ChrisArchitect 2 hours ago
• sleepybrett an hour ago

they should have spent this engineering time on stability.

• greatgib an hour ago

Here is the kind of crap they are building instead of focusing on stabilizing their core business features.

And after they will accuse the growth and all to be responsible for their stability issues...