Guozhen AIGlobal AI field notes and model intelligence

Realtime AI News

Microsoft Brings Its AI Agent Framework to Go After 8 Months of Development, Expanding Developer Reach

Microsoft has ported its AI agent framework to the Go programming language after approximately 8 months of development, enabling Go developers to build and deploy AI agent applications. The move extends Microsoft's AI toolchain to a language widely used in cloud-native and infrastructure development.

Published
微软历时8个月将AI代理框架带到Go语言,拓展开发者生态
Image source: microsoft.com

Microsoft has brought its AI agent framework to the Go programming language after roughly 8 months of adaptation and development work. Go developers can now use Microsoft's AI agent capabilities to build agent-powered applications directly.

Go holds a significant position in microservices, infrastructure tooling, and cloud application development thanks to its performance, concurrency model, and cloud-native ecosystem. By bringing its AI agent framework to Go, Microsoft fills a key gap in the language's AI development capabilities.

The Go release allows developers to access core AI agent capabilities — including agent runtime, tool calling, memory management, and multi-step task orchestration — using familiar Go syntax and toolchains. This has direct relevance for operations automation, intelligent cloud services, and edge computing scenarios.

This move is part of Microsoft's broader strategy to make its AI agent framework available across major programming languages. The framework already supported Python, C#, Java, and TypeScript, and adding Go significantly widens the developer reach.

For enterprise developers, particularly in China where Go is a mainstream choice for cloud-native and infrastructure work, this move lowers the barrier to integrating AI agents into existing Go-based systems and accelerates AI adoption in cloud infrastructure.

Specific functional modules and open-source details for the Go version are pending further official disclosure from Microsoft, but the strategic direction is clear: Microsoft is extending its AI agent framework from Python and .NET-dominated ecosystems to the broader developer community.

Why it matters

Expanding Microsoft's AI agent framework to Go will accelerate AI agent adoption in cloud-native and infrastructure contexts, opening new development pathways for operations automation and intelligent microservices.

MicrosoftGoAI AgentSemantic Kernel开发框架开源
Back to realtime news

Nearby Updates

All

07/12, 01:29

Blacklisted Chinese Firms Still Buying OpenAI and Google AI Tech via Singapore Loophole, Report Finds

An investigative report by Android Headlines reveals that Chinese companies on the U.S. Entity List are still acquiring AI technology from OpenAI and Google through intermediary channels in Singapore. Dubbed the Singapore Loophole, the practice raises questions about the effectiveness of existing export controls on AI technology.

07/12, 01:39

OpenAI's GPT-5.6 Sol Ultra Solves 50-Year-Old Math Conjecture in Under an Hour

OpenAI announced that GPT-5.6 Sol Ultra has generated a complete proof of the Cycle Double Cover Conjecture, an open problem in graph theory that had remained unsolved for roughly 50 years. The model completed the task in under an hour using 64 parallel subagents, though mathematicians note the proof lacks proper citations of prior work.

07/12, 02:38

Alibaba Open-Sources Open Code Review: An AI-Powered Review Tool for the AI Coding Era

Alibaba has open-sourced Open Code Review, an AI-powered code review tool that garnered over 5,000 GitHub stars in its first week. The tool uses a hybrid architecture combining deterministic engineering rules with AI agents to handle the growing review burden created by AI-generated code.

07/11, 22:52

Moonshot AI's K2.7 Code high-speed model officially lands on Kimi Code as a permanent mode

Moonshot AI's K2.7 Code high-speed model has been officially deployed on Kimi Code as a permanent selectable mode. The model focuses on faster code generation and programming assistance for developers.