Postman announced its acquisition of Fern, a developer experience company focused on helping businesses ship polished API documentation and production-ready Software Development Kits (SDKs).
CircleCI implemented a gen2 GPU resource class, leveraging Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) G5 instances, offering the latest generation of NVIDIA GPUs and new images tailored for artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML) workflows.
These under-the-hood enhancements put cost-effective, powerful resources at developers' fingertips to accelerate AI innovation. Additionally, the company launched key new features for teams building Large Language Model (LLM)-powered applications: inbound webhooks, including support for tools like Hugging Face, and an integration with evaluation platform LangSmith. The company also released a CircleCI Orb for Amazon SageMaker to help software teams deploy and monitor ML models at scale.
As organizations race to build, deploy, and manage AI-enabled applications on a commercial scale, they’re grappling with how to get started. With its new inbound webhooks and evaluation platform integrations, CircleCI is redefining what CI/CD tools do to manage the novel complexity that AI/ML introduces so that teams can confidently go from idea to innovation.
CircleCI’s latest features are pivotal in helping teams manage the complexity of developing AI-powered applications by providing a structured, automated pipeline spanning from building and testing to training and monitoring them. Its new inbound webhooks are entirely adaptable to all sources of change, making it the most change-agnostic CI/CD tool on the market. This also marks a necessary departure from a version control-centric approach to now allowing users to trigger pipelines through various sources. This shift is crucial as AI-powered applications live outside the repository, with code, data, and the LLM all interacting to drive novel product experiences for end consumers. Therefore, engineering teams must rethink how they test, release, and retrain their applications.
The custom Hugging Face integration is a new trigger to kick off pipelines. Developers can now run automated workflows any time a model on Hugging Face changes, so engineering teams can be confident that their application continues to behave as expected. The LangSmith integration is the first of many evaluation platforms to be supported on CircleCI, enabling robust testing for non-deterministic outcomes. Testing AI-enabled applications is new territory for professional software teams, and these new capabilities from CircleCI will dramatically up-level developer confidence when building and validating LLM-powered software.
“Software teams are building the next wave of AI-powered applications that solve specific customer pain points,” said Rob Zuber, CTO at CircleCI. “While many teams find it difficult to get started, at the end of the day, we’re still building software. You already have 95% of the tools needed to do it. By supporting AI product builders with CircleCI’s comprehensive CI/CD tooling, engineering teams can confidently build upon years of key learnings while also addressing the novel changes AI introduces.”
CircleCI also introduced its new Orb for Amazon SageMaker to help teams using Amazon SageMaker ship their model to production. The Orb enables basic deployment to Amazon SageMaker, monitors deployments for problems, and quickly rolls back endpoints should something go awry. It also executes different deployment strategies, namely canary and blue/green style deployments.
Industry News
Keeper Security announced the launch of its JetBrains extension, offering JetBrains Integrated Development Environment (IDE) users a secure and seamless way to manage secrets within their development workflows.
Red Hat announced a landmark expansion of its collaboration with NVIDIA to align enterprise open source technologies to the rapidity of enterprise AI evolution and rack-scale AI advances.
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, announced the schedule for KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026, taking place in Amsterdam, March 23-26.
Check Point® Software Technologies Ltd. announces that it has been recognized as a Leader in the 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Email Security.
Apiiro introduced Apiiro AI SAST, a new approach to static application security testing (SAST) that automates code risk detection, validation and fixes with the precision and cognitive process of an expert application security engineer.
The Linux Foundation, the nonprofit organization enabling mass innovation through open source, announced the formation of the Open Robust Compartmentalization Alliance (ORCA).
Docker is making its catalog of more than 1,000 Docker Hardened Images (DHI), built on the widely adopted open source distributions Debian and Alpine, free and fully open source under the Apache 2.0 license.
Google announced Gemini 3 Flash, their newest model built for speed and scale.
Google Cloud announced the public launch of A2UI, a now open-source project focused on building better agentic user interfaces.
Chainguard announced EmerittOSS, a new program that provides a stable and predictable home for widely used but archived or abandoned open-source projects - helping establish a predictable runway as developers plan next steps and offering maintainers a smoother, supported exit when they're ready to step away.
Mirantis announced AdaptiveOps services to help enterprises deploy Model Context Protocol (MCP), ranging from assessments to design, build and operation of AI-native systems using MCP.
FoundryCo.'s InfoWorld has named Backslash Security to its 2025 Technology of the Year Awards list, recognizing the company as the winner in the AI and Machine Learning: Security category.
Google announced they are bringing their deep research experiences to developers via a powerful Gemini Deep Research agent in the Gemini API.
Infragistics announced that Ignite UI — its library of enterprise-ready data charts, grids and user interface (UI) components — is now open source across Angular, Blazor, React and Web Components.




