Cursor Visual Editor
https://cursor.com/blog/browser-visual-editor
Cursor introduced a visual editor with a "Point and Prompt" feature: you can simply click on any interface element and describe in text what needs to be changed. It also allows manipulating the site structure using drag-and-drop elements in the DOM tree, changing button order or grid settings.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1S8S89X-xbs
The editor's sidebar provides visual control over component properties (props) and styles: from typography sliders to a color palette. The update aims to blur the line between design and programming, allowing developers to focus on ideas rather than mechanical code work.
Claude Code Plugins
https://code.claude.com/docs/en/plugin-marketplaces
Anthropic launched a plugins marketplace, seemingly in response to a similar one in Gemini CLI. It is not a separate website with an App Store-like interface. It's a system within Claude Code itself, where marketplaces are plugin catalogs (often based on GitHub repositories) that are added and managed via slash commands.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uWJC2r6Sss
Also, there are now prompt suggestion variants and a hotkey for switching models during a prompt. Subagents can work in parallel. Improved usage statistics and a visual fill-indicator for the context window have been added.
You can now run Claude Code tasks directly from the Claude Android mobile app. This is not a full-fledged terminal on the phone, but an asynchronous integration where Claude runs in the cloud.
Kiro Powers
https://kiro.dev/docs/powers/
Kiro is testing the concept of Powers for a model that solves the problem of context window clutter through dynamic tool activation; the system analyzes the user's query and enables only the necessary "knowledge pack." This is very similar to "Skills" in Anthropic's models.
When many tools (MCP servers) are connected to an agent, it is forced to load hundreds of function descriptions simultaneously. This "eats up" to 40% of the limit before work even begins, leading to irrelevant advice. Instead, each Power is a ready-made set containing instructions (how and when to use tools), server configuration, and automated scenarios.
For example, if you mention "payment," the Power for Stripe is activated, providing specific knowledge about the API and security. As soon as you move to working with a database, Stripe tools are disabled, and instead, the Power for Supabase or Neon is loaded. This allows the agent to remain fast, focus on a specific topic, and produce higher quality code.
The system offers an open ecosystem with one-click installation for popular services (AWS, Figma, Stripe, etc.).
#cursor #claudecode #kiro
