Google Antigravity 2.0 removes the IDE to become a standalone workstation

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CryptoWorld News reports that Google officially released Antigravity 2.0, removing the traditional IDE interface, and making the agent manager, originally integrated into the editor, a standalone desktop application, with full support for macOS, Windows, and Linux. The new version replaces the original workspace with a project concept, allowing a project to span multiple local folders and configuring read/write permissions for each folder individually. When handling complex tasks, the main agent can now dynamically invoke multiple sub-agents to process in parallel, avoiding the main context being filled with invalid logs. Additionally, long-duration tasks such as compilation and testing are now pushed into the background for asynchronous execution. A scheduled wake-up mechanism is introduced for the first time on the desktop, enabling users to set one-time timers or cron cycles with the /schedule command, allowing the agent to automatically wake up and execute scripts or perform inspections at scheduled times. The new slash commands clearly define the current tolerance boundaries for Google’s autonomy over agents. Along with the standalone desktop application, Google also released supporting CLI, SDK, and API tools, and announced that the original Gemini CLI personal toolchain will be fully migrated to Antigravity CLI in the future.
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