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Stop Tuning Prompts. Build a Harness.

Engin Diri Engin Diri
Stop Tuning Prompts. Build a Harness.

Anthropic shipped a piece earlier this month called How Claude Code Works in Large Codebases. I have not read anything more useful about coding agents this year. The core claim, in their words: “the ecosystem built around the model—the harness—determines how Claude Code performs more than the model alone.” In my phrasing: in a real codebase, the model is the smaller variable. The layer of context and tooling you wire around the agent matters more than which version of Sonnet or Opus is behind it.

The post stays high-level, which is the right move for a launch piece. What I want to do here is land it. Same seven pieces, but with the wiring you would actually put in a repo, in the order I would put it.

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Introducing pulumi do: Direct Resource Operations for Any Cloud

Introducing pulumi do: Direct Resource Operations for Any Cloud

Infrastructure as code is the right model for production systems. State tracking, drift detection, and repeatable deployments all matter when you’re managing real workloads.

But sometimes, you also need a quick, one-off interaction with the cloud: create a bucket or a database, look up a VPC, delete a stray resource.

Today we’re introducing pulumi do, a new command for direct resource operations. With pulumi do, you can create, read, update, delete, and query any cloud resource from the terminal with a single command, across thousands of Pulumi-supported providers — no project, code, or state required.

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Neo Integrations: MCP Servers and Cloud CLIs

Pulumi Neo Team Pulumi Neo Team
Neo Integrations: MCP Servers and Cloud CLIs

Pulumi Neo already understands your infrastructure: your code, your stacks, your state. Today we’re launching new capabilities that extend Neo’s reach in two directions: into the third-party systems your team uses to plan and observe, and out to the cloud CLIs that actually drive your infrastructure.

The first half is MCP integrations: connections to Atlassian, Datadog, Honeycomb, Linear, PagerDuty, and Supabase that show up as tools Neo can call during a task. The second half is CLI integrations: scopable access to aws, gcloud, az, and kubectl. Both are configured once at the org level and available to every Neo task in the organization.

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Neo, Now in the Terminal

Pulumi Neo Team Pulumi Neo Team
Neo, Now in the Terminal

Since launching Pulumi Neo, over 4,500 organizations have used it to delegate real infrastructure work: scaffolding, migrating, investigating, operationalizing, and more. Though that usage has come entirely through Pulumi Cloud, we know a large portion of Pulumi users live in the terminal, and increasingly that’s where AI tools run too. Now we’re bringing Neo there.

pulumi neo brings the same Neo experience you’ve had in Pulumi Cloud to your terminal. Running locally means there’s no separate branch to push, no credentials to provision, and no context to paste: Neo picks up the setup you already have.

pulumi neo working through a Kubernetes cluster check, with Flux GitOps state verified and a TODO list in progress

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Ten More Things You Can Do With Pulumi Neo

Adam Gordon Bell Adam Gordon Bell
Ten More Things You Can Do With Pulumi Neo

Last fall, after launching Pulumi Neo, we wrote up 10 things you could do with it. In the months that followed, as platform teams handed Neo more real work, we watched and listened, shipping a steady stream of features like plan mode, read-only mode, AGENTS.md, an integration catalog, cross-cloud migration, and task sharing. With today’s release, Neo extends beyond the Pulumi Cloud console into the Pulumi CLI, GitHub, and Slack.

So here are 10 more things you can do with Neo.

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Better CLI Interactions for Agents and Humans

Michael Fallihee Michael Fallihee Christian Nunciato Christian Nunciato
Better CLI Interactions for Agents and Humans

AI agents do a lot of their work through CLIs. They’re easier to call than HTTP APIs and they produce predictable output. Over the last few months our own CLI traffic has shifted from mostly people typing commands to people and agents running commands together, often in the same session.

Today we’re shipping a release built for both. The Pulumi CLI is reorganized around three ideas: the right command should be the one you can guess, anything you can do in Pulumi Cloud should also be doable from the terminal, and what comes back should be just as readable to an agent as it is to a person.

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The Agentic Infrastructure Era

Joe Duffy Joe Duffy
The Agentic Infrastructure Era

The first frontier agents excelled at was coding. The reason is evident: we have billions of lines of self-documenting code available on the internet for the LLMs to learn from. We can measure their performance on coding thanks to linters, type checkers, compilers, and test suites. The most advanced agentic systems to hit product/market fit have been coding-oriented, and it has resulted in an intense velocity increase in how much and how fast code we can write.

But as the AI tsunami whips up reams of code, what happens to it becomes just as critical. As an industry, we’ve moved beyond just coding to engineering, which includes documentation, tests, automation, and, yes, managing the very infrastructure our applications need to run. The deeper into production you go, however, the less good agents naturally are at helping. At Pulumi, we live and breathe infrastructure, and have seen this firsthand. But we’ve also been hard at work building the platform this new era runs on. In this post, I’ll share our point of view, what we’ve built, what we’re launching today, and why all infrastructure is about to be agentic.

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The infrastructure as code platform for any cloud.