Salesforce is packaging its developer and AI tooling, including its vibe coding environment Agentforce Vibes, into a new platform named Headless 360, designed to help enterprise teams build agent-first workflows.
The CRM software provider defines agent-first workflows as enterprise processes in which software agents, rather than human users, carry out tasks by directly invoking APIs, tools, and predefined business logic.
To support this approach, Headless 360 exposes Salesforce’s underlying data, workflows, and governance controls as APIs, MCP tools, and CLI commands, via its existing offerings, such as Data 360, Customer 360, and Agentforce, Joe Inzerillo, president of AI technology at Salesforce, said during a press briefing.
This allows agents to operate directly on the platform’s existing business logic and datasets, rather than relying on separate integrations or user interfaces, Inzerillo added.
Push to become a control layer for enterprise AI agents
Analysts, however, see Headle
OpenAI has shipped a Chrome extension for Codex, its AI coding agent, enabling it to complete browser-based tasks directly inside Google Chrome on macOS and Windows — including interacting with signed-in websites, using Chrome DevTools, and running multi-step workflows across browser tabs.
The post OpenAI Adds Chrome Extension to Codex, Letting Its AI Agent Access LinkedIn, Salesforce, Gmail, and Internal Tools via Signed-In Sessions appeared first on MarkTechPost.
As agents move past demos and into enterprise workflows, organizations are confronting the governance, infrastructure and operational problems posed by more autonomous AI systems.
Insider Brief PRESS RELEASE — Nace.AI has announced it has raised $21.5 million in seed funding, led by Walden Catalyst with participation from General Catalyst and a group of leading institutional and angel investors. Alongside the raise, the company is launching its new product in research preview, a new model for professional work where 100+ specialized AI agents […]
So far in 2026, companies in sales, marketing and CRM categories have pulled in around $2.7 billion globally in seed- through growth-stage funding, per Crunchbase data.
Modern frontend applications rely on cloud services for far more than basic data fetching. Authentication, search, file uploads, feature flags, notifications and analytics often depend on APIs and managed services running behind the scenes. Because of that, frontend reliability is closely tied to cloud reliability, even when the frontend team does not directly own the infrastructure.
This is often one of the biggest mindsets shifts for frontend engineers. We often think about failure as a total outage where the whole site is down. In practice, that is not what most users experience. More often, the interface is partially degraded: A dashboard loads but one panel is empty, a form saves but the confirmation never arrives, or a file upload stalls while the rest of the page still appears normal.
That is why I think frontend resilience deserves more attention in day-to-day engineering conversations. The goal is not to prevent every cloud issue. That is rarely realistic. The more practical g
Sierra, the enterprise AI agent platform founded by Bret Taylor, is raising $950 million led by Tiger Global and GV, pushing its post-money valuation above $15 billion. Taylor, who also chairs OpenAI and previously co-led Salesforce, founded Sierra to replace traditional enterprise software interfaces with autonomous AI agents. The company claims over 40% of the […]