 ## GitHub Copilot Max, agent-driven development and why AI will write your code tomorrow In May 2026, GitHub announced a new Copilot lineup — Pro+ with flex allocations and a Max plan for those who need more. But the main thing isn't the pricing. The main thing is their Applied Science article about agent-driven development: GitHub engineers used coding agents to write agents that automate part of their work. This isn't hype, it's production. ### What's really changing 1. **Agent-driven development — a new paradigm** Copilot is no longer just autocomplete, but an agent that explores code, writes tests, and reviews PRs on its own. In the article, a GitHub engineer admits: "I used agents to build agents that automate my work." This isn't a replacement for developers — it's an assistant that handles 80% of the routine. 2. **GitHub Issues become instant** Navigation was rewritten with client-side caching + prefetching + service workers. Now switching between issues/PRs is lag-free. For those living in GitHub Issues, that's +2 hours of productivity per day. 3. **eBPF for safe deployment** GitHub uses eBPF to detect cyclic dependencies in deployment tooling. A technique from the Linux kernel now saves production environments. ### What this means for you If you're a developer — AI agents are no longer "someday," they're writing production code right now. The gap between those who use agents and those who don't will be like the gap between Git and FTP. At ASI Biont, we build agents that do the same for business — automate routine, write integration code, analyze data. Don't wait for competitors to adopt it — try it yourself. → [Try an AI agent for your business](https://asibiont.com/)