The VP Geek Speaks

GitHub Copilot's Real Upgrade Is Choice, Not Just More Models
Technology-StrategyEngineering-Leadership
Mar 12, 2026
3 minutes

GitHub Copilot's Real Upgrade Is Choice, Not Just More Models

On February 26, GitHub expanded access to Claude and Codex for Copilot Business and Copilot Pro users, following the earlier February rollout to Pro+ and Enterprise. On paper, this is a pricing and availability update. In practice, it is a product-definition change.

GitHub is turning Copilot from a branded assistant into a control surface for multiple coding agents.

Why This Is Bigger Than It Sounds

For a long time, the framing around Copilot was simple: GitHub had an assistant, and the main question was how good that assistant was. With Claude and Codex available directly inside GitHub workflows, the framing changes.

Visual Studio's Built-In Azure MCP Server Is a Bigger Deal Than It Looks
Technology-StrategyDevelopment-Practices
Mar 11, 2026
4 minutes

Visual Studio's Built-In Azure MCP Server Is a Bigger Deal Than It Looks

Microsoft quietly made one of the strongest enterprise bets in the current AI tooling cycle: Azure MCP Server is now built into Visual Studio 2026.

For teams already living in Microsoft’s ecosystem, this is not just another integration announcement. It is a signal that agentic workflows are moving from optional plugin territory into the default shape of mainstream enterprise development.

Why This Matters

MCP, or Model Context Protocol, is becoming the standard way AI agents connect to tools, systems, and data sources. We already knew that mattered in principle. What changes here is that Microsoft has now embedded an MCP-backed cloud workflow directly inside a flagship IDE.

Cursor in JetBrains and the End of IDE Lock-In
Technology-StrategyDevelopment-Practices
Mar 10, 2026
3 minutes

Cursor in JetBrains and the End of IDE Lock-In

One of the quietest but most important developer-tooling stories of March 2026 is that Cursor is now available directly inside JetBrains IDEs through the Agent Client Protocol, or ACP, registry.

At first glance, this looks like a convenience feature. Cursor users can keep their preferred agent while staying in IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, or WebStorm. JetBrains users get access to a popular agentic workflow without switching editors. Nice, but not transformative.

Codex Security and the Rise of AI Reviewing AI
Technology-StrategyEngineering-Leadership
Mar 9, 2026
4 minutes

Codex Security and the Rise of AI Reviewing AI

The next big shift in AI-assisted software development is not more code generation. It is AI for verification.

OpenAI’s new Codex Security research preview, announced in early March 2026, is a good signal of where the market is going. The product scans repositories commit by commit, builds repository-specific threat models, validates findings in isolated environments, and ranks issues with proposed fixes. OpenAI says early adopters used it to detect more than 11,000 critical and high-severity vulnerabilities while cutting false positives by more than 50%.

Why AI Is Hurting Your Best Engineers Most
Engineering-LeadershipIndustry-Insights
Mar 8, 2026
4 minutes

Why AI Is Hurting Your Best Engineers Most

The productivity story on AI coding tools has a flattering headline: senior engineers realize nearly five times the productivity gains of junior engineers from AI tools. More experience means better prompts, better evaluation of output, better use of AI on the right tasks. The gap is real and it makes sense.

But there’s a hidden cost buried in that same data. The tasks senior engineers are being asked to spend their time on are changing—and not always in ways that use their strengths well. Increasingly, the work that lands on senior engineers’ plates in AI-augmented teams is validation, review, and debugging of AI-generated code—a category of work that is simultaneously less interesting, harder than it looks, and consuming time that used to go to architecture, design, and mentorship.

The OpenAI Codex App and What Multi-Agent Development Actually Looks Like
Development-PracticesTechnology-Strategy
Mar 7, 2026
4 minutes

The OpenAI Codex App and What Multi-Agent Development Actually Looks Like

In February 2026, OpenAI shipped a standalone Codex app. The headline is straightforward: it lets you manage multiple AI coding agents across projects, with parallel task execution, persistent context, and built-in git tooling. It’s currently available on macOS for paid ChatGPT plan subscribers.

But the headline undersells what’s actually happening. The Codex app isn’t just a better chat interface for code—it’s an early, concrete version of what multi-agent software development looks like when it arrives as a consumer product. Understanding what it actually does (and doesn’t do) matters for any team thinking seriously about AI-assisted development in 2026.

MCP: The Integration Standard That Quietly Became Mandatory
Technology-StrategyDevelopment-Practices
Mar 6, 2026
4 minutes

MCP: The Integration Standard That Quietly Became Mandatory

If you were paying attention to AI tooling in late 2024, you heard about the Model Context Protocol (MCP). If you weren’t, you may have missed the quiet transition from “Anthropic’s new open standard” to “the de facto integration layer for AI agents.” By early 2026, MCP has 70+ client applications, 10,000+ active servers, 97+ million monthly SDK downloads, and—in December 2025—moved to governance under the Agentic AI Foundation under the Linux Foundation. Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon have all adopted it.

The Great Toil Shift: AI Didn't Remove Your Drudge Work, It Moved It
Industry-InsightsProcess-Methodology
Mar 5, 2026
4 minutes

The Great Toil Shift: AI Didn't Remove Your Drudge Work, It Moved It

One of the clearest promises of AI coding tools was relief from developer toil: the repetitive, low-value work—debugging boilerplate, writing tests for obvious code, fixing the same style violations—that keeps engineers from doing the interesting parts of their jobs. The premise was simple: AI does the tedious parts, humans do the creative parts.

The data from 2026 tells a more nuanced story. According to Sonar’s analysis and Opsera’s 2026 AI Coding Impact Benchmark Report, the amount of time developers spend on toil hasn’t decreased meaningfully. It’s shifted. High AI users spend roughly the same 23–25% of their workweek on drudge work as low AI users—they’ve just changed what they’re doing with that time.

GitHub's Agent Control Plane: What Enterprise AI Governance Actually Looks Like
Technology-StrategyEngineering-Leadership
Mar 4, 2026
4 minutes

GitHub's Agent Control Plane: What Enterprise AI Governance Actually Looks Like

On February 26, 2026, GitHub made its Enterprise AI Controls and agent control plane generally available. The timing is notable: it came in the same week that Claude and Codex became available for Copilot Business and Pro users, and as GitHub Enterprise Server 3.20 hit release candidate. The GA isn’t a coincidence—it reflects an industry that has moved from “should we let agents into our codebase?” to “how do we govern agents that are already in our codebase?”

The PR Tsunami: What AI Code Volume Is Doing to Your Review Process
Engineering-LeadershipPerformance-Optimization
Mar 3, 2026
4 minutes

The PR Tsunami: What AI Code Volume Is Doing to Your Review Process

AI coding tools delivered on their core promise: developers write less, ship more. Teams using AI complete 21% more tasks. PR volume has exploded—some teams that previously handled 10–15 pull requests per week are now seeing 50–100. In a narrow sense, that’s a win.

But there’s a tax on that win that most engineering leaders aren’t accounting for: AI-generated PRs wait 4.6x longer for review than human-written code, despite actually being reviewed 2x faster once someone picks them up. The bottleneck isn’t coding anymore. It’s review capacity, and it’s getting worse as AI generation accelerates.