Every product moved the same way today: opening itself up to AI agents over MCP.
The lead
The clearest signal today isn't a single launch — it's a direction almost every product moved in at once: making itself operable by AI agents. GitHub Copilot and GitHub both sit at the top of the velocity board, and the story on both is the same. Copilot added Kimi K2.7 as its first open-weight model and made auto model-selection the enterprise default, while GitHub wrapped the whole thing in managed-settings.json policy controls and quietly retired its standalone Models playground. The bet is legible: become the model-agnostic substrate enterprises run AI on, then meter and govern it.
Underneath that headline, the same move repeats across unrelated categories. Atlassian's feed is now dominated by Rovo MCP — a server that exposes Jira and Bitbucket context to external coding agents with scoped, admin-governed access. Slack is rebuilding its developer platform from bots-that-reply into agents-that-act, letting Slackbot call external tools over MCP. MotherDuck shipped an MCP server and Dive Viewer that now runs inside ChatGPT and Claude. The connective tissue everyone is laying down is the same protocol.
What moved
- Agent-operability via MCP was the day's dominant theme. Atlassian, Slack, MotherDuck, RankMath, ShipHero, WPForms, and Deepnote all shipped or expanded MCP surfaces — each opening its own data and actions to outside assistants like Claude and ChatGPT rather than keeping them locked behind its own UI.
- AI rebuilt as the core product, not a feature. ClickUp relaunched Brain as "Brain²," positioned as a self-improving AI coworker rather than a chatbot; UXPin put generation at the center with Forge and Wire (prototype-to-React); Pitch went from slide actions to a full deck-building agent.
- Governance and metering matured alongside the agents. GitHub Copilot's
managed-settings.jsonand AI-credit billing, and Gumloop's agent-owned credentials and org-wide credit insights, show the same instinct: ship autonomy, then ship the controls to bill and audit it. - Vertical and infra hardening continued underneath the AI story. Twilio pushed messaging toward HIPAA and regulated-industry compliance, Moov widened its money-movement surface, and SigNoz rebuilt its observability UX around an AI teammate.
Sectors today
- AI assistants / devtools: the day's center of gravity — Copilot, GitHub, and SigNoz all bent toward model-agnostic infrastructure and enterprise governance.
- Project management: ClickUp and Atlassian both repositioned from "app humans click" to "system agents read and write," via Brain² and Rovo MCP respectively.
- Analytics: MotherDuck and Deepnote independently reframed the data warehouse and the notebook as agent-operable infrastructure.
- Marketing / marketing-automation: RankMath chased generative-engine optimization while Gumloop built the run-agents-across-an-org layer; both lead with MCP.
- Design: UXPin and Pitch went AI-native, moving from assisting the designer to generating the artifact.
- Customer support / communication: Twilio hardened messaging for regulated industries; Slack turned its platform into a place agents converse and act.
Watch tomorrow
The thread to watch is where MCP stops being a feature and starts being a moat. The products that opened up today — Atlassian, Slack, MotherDuck, GitHub — are all racing to be the system of record that agents read from and write to, and the follow-on move is almost always governance: scoped access, per-agent credentials, cost controls. Expect the next releases from Copilot and Gumloop to be less about new models and more about metering and audit. Watch too whether the "AI coworker" framing (ClickUp's Brain², UXPin's Forge) produces autonomous task completion readers can actually verify, or stays a positioning layer over assisted chat.