The speed that AI can now discover and exploit vulnerabilities means that our defenses also need to adjust. For the devices that you manage where you can afford to tighten deployment timelines, we'll explain updated recommendations and show you how to speed up patching.
It starts with assessing your risk exposure for unpatched devices using the new Autopatch report in Microsoft Intune, then tightening deferral policies on the devices where it makes sense, using Hotpatch to activate protection on install — without requiring reboots. Windows Autopatch automates your update deployments using rings to progressively apply updates to the device groups that you help define, including updates for Windows, Microsoft 365 Apps and the Edge browser. And to keep internal resources protected, you can enforce access controls using Conditional Access to block non-compliant devices.
Jeremy Chapman, Microsoft 365 Director, shares what's changed along with the approaches you can take to help counter the growing number of AI-discovered vulnerabilities and stay protected.
► QUICK LINKS:
00:00 - AI and Windows patch management
01:13 - Updated patching deferral thresholds
01:46 - Hotpatch on by default
02:05 - Windows Autopatch report
02:30 - Ring-based deployment + M365 Apps servicing profile
02:50 - Conditional Access for non-compliant devices
03:16 - Wrap up
► Link References
For what you can do beyond patching, go to https://aka.ms/securenow
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As the share of code written by AI agents grows rapidly, two questions are central to effective AI adoption: How can teams turn AI usage into real productivity gains, and how can they maintain quality, security, and control while doing so? CI/CD is critical to both.

Every contribution, whether written by a human or an AI agent, still needs to be built, tested, verified, and delivered through a trusted process. With the volume of AI-generated code ever increasing and the need to verify its quality and security, CI/CD has to support this process at a new scale.
The context and tools that CI/CD provides to AI agents will determine how effectively they can work with verification results, react to failures, and iterate on changes. This will help teams improve velocity with AI while controlling quality, security, and delivery.
For many years, TeamCity has served as a CI/CD platform for reliable building, testing, and delivery in human-driven software development. We are now developing TeamCity for a new reality where software is created through the collaboration between humans and AI coding agents.
This evolution builds on TeamCity’s existing strengths: a powerful, flexible product foundation that enables scale from individual use to enterprise-level systems. We are investing in strengthening these foundations so TeamCity can reliably support higher code change volumes from developers and AI agents.
We’re also building new end-user scenarios that help teams maintain a smooth experience as software development processes evolve.
TeamCity currently has four key strengths as a CI/CD platform:
We believe TeamCity is well-positioned for the evolution of CI/CD in a world with more code changes, more verification loops, more interaction between AI agents and CI/CD systems, and a stronger need for scale, reliability, and control.
AI adoption in development processes is growing. While many developers already use AI agents to write code, companies are still struggling to achieve large productivity gains at an organizational scale. JetBrains is committed to helping customers with this.
Part of the challenge is AI governance: security, cost control, and transparency around the use of AI agents in an organization. JetBrains addresses these problems with JetBrains Central – a new control plane for AI adoption in organizations.
As the use of AI agents in development increases, the requirements for CI/CD also evolve. In development processes where a lot of code is generated by AI agents, deterministic, reliable, and secure building, testing, and delivery become critical.
We see several key directions in which CI/CD tooling will evolve.
We continue to develop TeamCity for this future, investing both in core CI/CD capabilities and in integration with AI workflows.
We’re taking a pragmatic approach to AI capabilities:
We are also deepening TeamCity’s role in the JetBrains ecosystem, which supports customers across the entire software development life cycle. JetBrains IDEs and Air help improve individual and team productivity, TeamCity builds and delivers code, Qodana helps ensure its quality, and JetBrains Central helps govern AI usage.
In line with this, the TeamCity roadmap is shaped around the following streams.
We are investing in:
Our goal is to make it possible for developers to work with TeamCity end to end, both directly and through AI agents, without leaving their context, whether that’s the IDE, terminal, or an agentic development environment (ADE) like Air.
To do this, we are developing the CLI, MCP server, agent skills, and plugin for JetBrains IDEs. We are investing in support for working with TeamCity through these interfaces, including:
TeamCity can already launch AI agents as part of pipelines. We are expanding these capabilities and improving the user experience by:
We continue to develop TeamCity in line with our vision of the future, while listening closely to our customers. We have set the main areas we are investing in while keeping the details flexible so we can adapt to customer needs, technology shifts, and broader market changes.
We want to highlight a few focus areas in our long-term plans:
As AI changes how software is created, reliable and controlled building, testing, and delivery become even more important. That is the future we are building TeamCity for.
Let's have an honest discussion about .NET development in the age of AI - what works & what doesn't.
Learning identity management is hard enough. Navigating Okta’s documentation to build something shouldn’t be. If you’ve ever lost an afternoon stitching together how-to guides, product docs, and scattered blog posts just to figure out where to start, you’re not alone – and we’ve heard you, loudly and repeatedly.
Today, we’re excited to announce the official launch of Journeys: a new way to navigate Okta documentation built around the tasks you’re actually trying to accomplish.
A Journey is a curated, expert-driven, end-to-end guide built around a small-to-medium-sized development project. Rather than sending you to find a single document and piece the rest together yourself, each Journey walks you through the entire project, from foundational concepts to completion.
Journeys address the most frequent questions we’ve heard from developers. Every Journey includes both brand-new material and revised content to ensure that what you’re reading is accurate, up to date, and genuinely useful.
Each Journey organizes content into three main sections.
Before you write a single line of code, it helps to know the terrain. The Learn section anchors the broad “identity” concept, covering foundational knowledge including Okta features, software development kits (SDKs), and application programming interfaces (APIs) relevant to your task. Whether you’re new to Okta or just unfamiliar with a specific area, this section gives you the vocabulary and mental model you need to make informed decisions. It ensures you’re not just following steps, but truly understanding the technology and concepts underlying your project.
Good implementations start with good planning. The Plan section walks you through the key decision points to consider before you begin – from the pros and cons of migration strategies and deployment models to configuration options, rate limits, and key performance indicators (KPIs). These are all common concerns from the field. Decisions made here shape everything that follows, so you won’t discover them for the first time mid-build.
This is where everything comes together. The Build section presents a carefully curated collection of resources, organized to guide you through your project from start to finish. No more hunting across technical content channels to find the correct how-to guide, configuration advice, Knowledge Base (KB) article, blog post, API endpoint details, or videos. Everything you need is in one place, in the right order.
Every Journey covers the Okta-recommended approach and adds common alternatives when practical, because we know one size doesn’t always fit all.
The first six Journeys are live today, targeting Okta Customer Identity (OCI) builders developing and securing customer-facing portals. If you’re working on user authentication, registration, company branding, or user management, these Journeys are for you.
This is just the beginning. We’re already building new Journeys to tackle high-impact, emerging scenarios, including:
We are committed to continuously expanding this library so that, no matter your development goal, you have a clear, expert-guided path to success.
These Journeys will fundamentally improve your development experience. Explore them, share your feedback, and let us know what Journeys you’d like to see next. Use the feedback tab on the Journey page, reach out to us on the Okta Developer Forums, or find us on socials.
Happy building.
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The AI Economy Institute (AIEI) is launching its third cohort of researchers, advancing our mission to understand the adoption of artificial intelligence across economies, industries, and communities.
We launched the AI Economy Institute because AI’s economic impact is not predetermined. Though AI is being rapidly adopted, the evidence base for understanding its impact on work, jobs, education, productivity, and opportunity is still too thin. By increasing the scholarship around the AI economy and producing it in a timely and accessible way, we can help ensure that as AI transforms our world, we’re equipping people with the knowledge and tools they need to make decisions and succeed with AI.
The AI Economy Institute convenes outside experts and researchers to share their perspectives and advance the body of knowledge on topics related to AI, work, and education. Our third global research call centered on understanding how frontier firms are reshaping work and the broader economic landscape.
Representing a diverse group of institutions worldwide, our cohort brings together subject matter experts and researchers to explore how AI is reshaping the workforce, organizations, and the broader economy. The cohort consists of the following individuals, representing the following institutions:
Cohort members will analyze frontier firms to examine both upstream, firm-level transformations and downstream, economy-wide impacts. Researchers will also explore how AI changes job design, skill demands, productivity, and regional economic development.
AIEI’s first two cohorts explored how AI is reshaping the talent pipeline, from higher education and skills to K-12, community colleges, and early-career pathways, so that we could understand and inform the early changes to the labor market. What we learned from that point of inquiry shifted the focus; this year’s cohort moves further into the economy itself, focusing on frontier firms and how leading organizations are adopting AI, redesigning work, and creating the conditions for productivity, diffusion, and human agency at scale.
Since its launch, the AI Economy Institute has fielded more than 800 responses to our calls for research proposals. The gap between what AI systems can do and what organizations can actually deploy will shape the pace of adoption. Gains in productivity may come alongside organizational shifts as firms adapt their workflows, teams, and decision-making processes.
At the same time, the expansion of automation raises a parallel question of whether systems are enhancing human learning or displacing it. Underlying all of this is a broader uncertainty about the extent to which AI will diffuse widely across economies or concentrate in a narrow set of firms and regions.
Cohort 3 moves beyond identifying these tensions and toward generating the empirical evidence needed to navigate them, providing policymakers, firms, and institutions with a clearer basis for decision-making in a rapidly evolving AI economy.
The post New cohort of AI Economy Institute Fellows to examine frontier AI firms and the transformation of work appeared first on Microsoft On the Issues.