If a team of human engineers built a web browser that only half-worked, it wouldn't get people talking. But when Michael Truell, CEO of coding startup Cursor, posted on X last week that a swarm of AI agents had built a browser that, he wrote, "kind of works"-while running uninterrupted for a week without any human intervention-it went viral across the tech world, with over six million views.
In the world of earnings reports and pitch decks, the ultimate goal of our current AI boom is usually called something like artificial general intelligence (AGI), superintelligence, or-if you're really nerdy- recursive self-improving AI. But in the real world, we're all just looking for the Enterprise computer: a digital assistant you can talk to that doesn't just fully understand you, but can do things for you instantly.