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Native Remote AI Agents Coming Soon to Visual Studio

Microsoft is preparing to make remote AI agents a native part of Visual Studio, marking a key evolution in how developers interact with GitHub Copilot and the IDE's AI-assisted features.

According to the Oct. 3 October AI roadmap posted by Microsoft's Rhea Patel, Visual Studio will soon allow users to start GitHub Copilot coding agent sessions directly from within Copilot Chat, eliminating the need to manually switch modes or invoke the agent separately.

"We are starting to bring remote agents like the GitHub Copilot Coding Agent into the platform as a native experience, and this is just the beginning," she said.

This new integration will streamline transitions between exploratory chat and executable coding workflows, letting developers launch and manage AI coding sessions entirely within the familiar chat interface.

GitHub Copilot Coding Agent
[Click on image for larger view.] GitHub Copilot Coding Agent (source: GitHub).

As described in the associated Developer Community roadmap item, also posted by Patel as part of the roadmap effort, goals include:

  • Allow users to launch the coding agent without leaving Copilot Chat.
  • Reduce friction for transitioning between exploratory Q&A and executable coding workflows.
  • Provide a clear UI affordance (button, command, or contextual suggestion) that kicks off an agent session.

"We want to provide developers with a more seamless way to move between Copilot Chat and the GitHub Copilot coding agent," Patel said in the "Start a GitHub Copilot coding agent session from Copilot Chat" Developer Community post. "Today, users need to explicitly change modes or manually invoke the coding agent. Instead, we should add an entry point in Copilot Chat that allows them to directly start a GitHub Copilot coding agent session from the chat experience."

The feature aims to reduce friction between conversational guidance and actual code execution, extending Copilot from a code suggestion system to an agentic assistant capable of performing tasks within the IDE.

Other AI Enhancements in Visual Studio
Beyond the remote agent work, Microsoft's October roadmap outlines several parallel initiatives to deepen AI integration in Visual Studio. These include improvements to existing agents, chat and tool capabilities, performance, model governance, and model variety:

  • New and Enhanced Agents: Visual Studio is developing additional agents such as a Debugger Agent and expanding the Modernize Agent's functionality. These agents are designed to assist in specialized workflows while maintaining consistency with built-in and extension-provided modes.
  • Agent Mode and Chat Improvements: Planned updates focus on dynamic tool calling, thread summarization for continued sessions, and mid-response redirection within Agent Mode. These enhancements are designed to improve how Copilot manages multi-step tasks and ongoing conversations.
  • Performance and Token Optimization: The roadmap identifies startup performance and response quality as key priorities, with specific work planned around token optimization, prompt caching, and tuning the `code_search` process to ensure efficient model invocation.
  • Model Context Protocol (MCP): Microsoft continues to expand MCP integration, enabling developers to bring their entire toolchain into Visual Studio under consistent security and governance policies. Work in this sprint includes MCP elicitation support, group policy governance, a unified UX, and Windows registry integration.
  • New Model Support: Visual Studio will also gain access to additional AI models within Copilot Chat, including Claude Sonnet 4.5 and GPT-5 Codex, as well as an automatic model selection feature for adaptive performance and accuracy.

Together, these updates signal a shift toward a more autonomous, context-aware development environment. Microsoft says its goal is to make Copilot "seamlessly available at every step of your development workflow--not just for writing code, but also for searching, fixing errors, writing unit tests, and even committing and pushing your changes."

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

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