Graphite
cursor.comKey Features
Key Features
Personally, I work on Graphite for two reasons. 1) I love working with kind, smart, intense teammates. I want to be surrounded by folks who I look up to and who energize me. 2) I want to build bleeding-edge dev tools that move the whole industry forward. I have so much respect for all y’all across the world, and nothing makes me happier than getting to create better tooling for y’all to engineer with. Graphite is very much the combination of these two passions: human collaboration and dev tools.
Joining Cursor accelerates both these goals. I get to work with the same team I love, a new bunch of wonderful people, and get to keep recruiting as fast as possible. I also get to keep shipping amazing code collaboration tooling to the industry - but now with more resourcing and expertise. We get to be more ambitious with our visions and timelines, and pull the future forward.
I wouldn’t do this if I didn’t think the Cursor team weren’t standup people with high character and kindness. I wouldn’t do this if I thought it meant compromising our vision of building a better generation of code collaboration tooling. I wouldn’t do it if I thought it wouldn’t be insanely fun and exciting. But it seems to be all those things, so we’re plunging forward with excitement and open hearts!
What do you like about the non-AI parts? I mean it's a little convenient to be able to type `gt submit` in order to create the remote branch and the PR in one step, but it doesn't feel like anything that an alias couldn't do.
With more resources than ever. We're building whole platform. That's a lot more than just AI.
Somebody screenshot this please. We are looking at comedy gold in the next 3 years and there’s no shortage of material.
- Hunter @ Ellipsis
I’ve long believed pull requests should be where you build, not where you wait. This acquisition makes that tangible at scale. Bringing Cursor and Graphite together turns software development into an AI-powered, collaborative, multiplayer experience—one that matches the speed and ambition of how code is being written today.
Excited to see what the two teams unlock together, and what this moment signals for the future of building software.
Is corporate English becoming a form of newspeak and will significantly diverge from regular English over the next 100 years?
Looks bad: https://forum.cursor.com/t/font-on-the-website-looks-weird/1...
Huge fans of their work @ GitStart!
My team has been using Qodo for a while now and i've found it to be pretty helpful. EVery once in a while it finds a serious issue, but the most useful part from my experience are the features that are geared towards speeding up my review rather than replacing it. Things like effort labels that are automatically added to the pr and a generated walk through that takes you through all of the changed files.
Would love to see a detailed comparison of the different options. Is there some kind of benchmark for AI code review that compares tools?
for anyone else looking for a replacement, git spice and jujutsu are both fantastic
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