OpenAI is acquiring Astral, the company behind the widely used Python tools Ruff, uv, and ty. Astral founder Charlie Marsh announced that his team is joining OpenAI's Codex team, the company's platform for agentic AI coding. According to Marsh, Astral's tools are downloaded hundreds of millions of times each month and have become a core part of modern Python development. Marsh says integrating them with Codex gives both projects the most room to grow. Astral was backed by Accel and Andreessen Horowitz, among others.
Our goal with Codex is to move beyond AI that simply generates code and toward systems that can participate in the entire development workflow—helping plan changes, modify codebases, run tools, verify results, and maintain software over time. Astral’s developer tools sit directly in that workflow.
OpenAI says it will keep the tools open source after the acquisition closes. Astral's Douglas Creager wrote on Hacker News that the tools are under a permissive license, so in a worst-case scenario, the community could fork the software and continue developing it independently.
No one can guarantee how motives, incentives, and decisions might change years down the line. But that's why we bake optionality into it with the tools being permissively licensed.
Anthropic's Claude Code now supports "channels," letting messages, notifications, and webhooks flow directly into a running session. Claude can respond to events even when the user isn't at the terminal, whether that's CI results, chat messages, or monitoring alerts.
Channels run through MCP servers and support two-way communication: Claude reads an incoming message and responds through the same channel. The research preview supports Telegram and Discord, and developers can build their own custom channels. The feature moves Anthropic's tooling closer to the AI agent hype around OpenClaw.
The feature requires Claude Code version 2.1.80 or later and a claude.ai login; API keys aren't supported. Teams and Enterprise organizations need to explicitly enable channels. Full details are in the official documentation.
Browser agents are losing ground to coding tools, and Google is pivoting. According to Wired, Google is restructuring the team behind Project Mariner, its AI agent for the Chrome browser. Some employees have been moved to higher-priority projects. Google confirmed the changes but stressed that the expertise developed will feed into other products, including the Gemini Agent announced last year.
Google has expanded the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) with shopping cart, catalog, and identity features to make online shopping easier for AI agents. The shopping cart function lets AI agents add multiple items to a store's cart at once. A new catalog feature gives agents access to real-time product data - including prices, variants, and availability - pulled directly from the retailer. An identity link lets logged-in shoppers on UCP platforms keep the same loyalty and membership benefits they'd get shopping directly with the retailer.
Google plans to integrate UCP into AI Mode in Search and the Gemini app, and the Merchant Center will make it easier for smaller merchants to connect in the future. Partners like Commerce Inc, Salesforce, and Stripe are planning to support UCP on their platforms. Google first introduced UCP earlier this year alongside Shopify, Etsy, Wayfair, Target, Walmart, and more than 20 other companies including Visa and Zalando as an open standard for AI-powered shopping.
Elevenlabs now lets you sell AI music you don't own
Elevenlabs has launched a marketplace for AI-generated music that pays creators when their tracks get downloaded or licensed. But who actually owns the music? A look at the terms of use tells the story: no one, really.
Google has launched a new vibe coding feature in Google AI Studio that lets non-programmers and programmers alike turn ideas into working apps using natural language. Users describe what they want, and Gemini 3.1 Pro handles the technical implementation. Apps are built directly in the browser and can handle things like payments, data storage, or messaging. Google says even multiplayer applications like real-time games are possible.
A new "Antigravity Agent" automatically detects when an app needs a database or login system and sets both up through Firebase. Third-party services like payment providers or Google Maps can be connected using API keys. When needed, the agent also installs web tools like Framer Motion or Shadcn on its own. In addition to React and Angular, the platform now supports Next.js as well.