
Cursor Glass
Unified agent workspace with seamless cloud handoff power
278 followers
Unified agent workspace with seamless cloud handoff power
278 followers
Cursor Glass introduces a unified interface for managing agents, repositories, and cloud tasks in one place. With Cloud Handoff, agents can seamlessly switch between local machines and cloud environments mid-task, eliminating workflow breaks. Powered by Composer 2, it delivers strong coding performance at lower cost. Built for engineers running parallel agents, Glass reduces context-switching and brings real visibility.








Cursor Glass is a new interface for agentic development that solves a real pain: managing multiple agents across local and cloud environments without losing visibility.
With a unified workspace for agents, repos, and tasks plus Cloud Handoff to switch between local and cloud mid-task, it reduces context-switching and keeps workflows seamless. Composer 2 adds strong performance at lower cost.
Built for engineers running parallel agents at scale especially useful for multi-agent workflows and cloud orchestration.
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Documentation.AI
@rohanrecommends Seems like Cursor's reply to OpenAI Codex.
@rohanrecommends With this update alone, Cursor is back in the top tier. It might be time to renew my subscription.
Cloud Handoff mid-task is the feature that was missing from every coding agent. The biggest friction I hit daily is wanting to start something on my laptop then continue on a remote machine. How does it handle state transfer for things like running dev servers or database connections?
What's the approach you're taking to ensure consistent performance and seamless handoff between local and cloud environments, especially considering potential latency or network issues?
This is a great release by Cursor Team. So, this is actually filling the gap where all the other models were doing really well, and I tried the Composer 2. It's fantastic. The speed is amazingly fast.Kudos to the team and well done.
This feels like a workflow unlock rather than just another agent wrapper, and the distinction matters.
The Cloud Handoff piece is where it gets interesting. That stop-start friction between local builds and cloud workloads is one of those things engineers just absorb as the cost of working across environments. The fact that you're treating it as a solvable problem rather than an accepted inconvenience says something about how you're thinking about the product.
The one thing I'd look at is the opening line. "Unified agent workspace" is accurate but it makes the brain work a little harder than it needs to. The real hook feels closer to "start anywhere, continue anywhere without losing your place." That version lands faster for someone scanning the page cold.
Curious how you're thinking about positioning relative to tools like Replit or Warp, particularly for teams that are multi-agent curious but haven't fully committed yet. That might actually be a bigger early audience than the teams already running at scale.
I notice these things because I spend a lot of time helping SaaS teams figure out how to make the value click faster on first contact. This one has a clear core insight. It's really just about making sure the page says what the product already knows about itself.
Landon
This feels like a genuine step forward, not just another agent layer dropped on top of existing tools.
The cloud handoff idea stands out the most. That friction between local and cloud work is something most engineers quietly put up with because there's no better option. Making it seamless isn't a nice to have, it's the kind of thing that changes how people actually work day to day. And I think it resonates beyond teams already running multi agent setups.
Devs who are just starting to explore that way of working will feel it too.
One thought on messaging: "unified agent workspace" is accurate, but it undersells the moment. The real hook feels more like "start anywhere, continue anywhere without losing your place." That lands instantly and makes the benefit obvious even on a quick scan, which matters a lot when most people are skimming.
Curious how you're thinking about the "multi agent curious" crowd versus power users already deep in it. That middle group feels like a significant opportunity, and the positioning for each is probably pretty different.
I spend a lot of time helping SaaS founders nail this first impression layer, especially around launches, so I find the messaging questions here genuinely interesting. The core is already strong. Feels like a few small tweaks could make it click even faster.