I just sat down at my desk and fired up Gemini CLI to get it to make a change to BlogMore, and I see this:

Goodbye Gemini CLI

I've yet to actually look at Antigravity, so I know pretty much nothing about it at this point. After a brief glance at the link that was given it seems like it's a positive change, perhaps. Honestly, I'm not sure. But that's kind of moot, I don't really have a choice. Within a month Gemini CLI is going to stop working anyway.

This is yet another reminder that, while plenty of folk are pushing these tools as the answer to the "problem" of software development, they're not really stable tools, it's not really a stable market, and, to some degree, if you fully rely on these tools, you're constantly at the mercy of the whims of some other company.

I'm glad I have a project where I'm forcing reliance on them as an experiment, so I can see and experience this first-hand, but I'd be very concerned for someone who's fully bought into them.

Perhaps there's a market here for a "Killed by AI" website, much like Killed by Google?

Or, maybe I'm being unfair here; it could be that this is more akin to Google solving the chat problem by constantly moving people from one chat application to another, while also having chat abilities in all sorts of other products...