Launched this week

Cursor Glass
Unified agent workspace with seamless cloud handoff power
241 followers
Unified agent workspace with seamless cloud handoff power
241 followers
Cursor Glass introduces a unified interface for managing agents, repositories, and cloud tasks in one place. With Cloud Handoff, agents can seamlessly switch between local machines and cloud environments mid-task, eliminating workflow breaks. Powered by Composer 2, it delivers strong coding performance at lower cost. Built for engineers running parallel agents, Glass reduces context-switching and brings real visibility.








This is a great release by Cursor Team. So, this is actually filling the gap where all the other models were doing really well, and I tried the Composer 2. It's fantastic. The speed is amazingly fast.Kudos to the team and well done.
Cursor Glass is a new interface for agentic development that solves a real pain: managing multiple agents across local and cloud environments without losing visibility.
With a unified workspace for agents, repos, and tasks plus Cloud Handoff to switch between local and cloud mid-task, it reduces context-switching and keeps workflows seamless. Composer 2 adds strong performance at lower cost.
Built for engineers running parallel agents at scale especially useful for multi-agent workflows and cloud orchestration.
P.S. I hunt the latest and greatest launches in tech, SaaS and AI, follow to be notified → @rohanrecommends
Documentation.AI
@rohanrecommends Seems like Cursor's reply to OpenAI Codex.
@rohanrecommends With this update alone, Cursor is back in the top tier. It might be time to renew my subscription.
Cloud Handoff mid-task is the feature that was missing from every coding agent. The biggest friction I hit daily is wanting to start something on my laptop then continue on a remote machine. How does it handle state transfer for things like running dev servers or database connections?
What's the approach you're taking to ensure consistent performance and seamless handoff between local and cloud environments, especially considering potential latency or network issues?