In a jaw-dropping reveal at AWS re:Invent 2025, Amazon Web Services unveiled frontier AI agents that operate independently for hours or even days. The star of the show? Kiro, an autonomous virtual developer that could revolutionize how we build software – or spark heated debates about the future of coding jobs.
Held from November 30 to December 5 in Las Vegas, re:Invent 2025 was all about AI. AWS CEO Matt Garman and other leaders showcased innovations making AI more accessible, powerful, and agentic for enterprises. Among dozens of announcements, the new "frontier agents" stole the spotlight with their ability to handle complex, long-running tasks with minimal human oversight.
Meet Kiro: The AI That Codes While You Sleep
Kiro is an advanced evolution of AWS's existing AI coding tools. This autonomous agent acts as a virtual software developer, tackling backlog tasks independently.
Here's how it works:
- Learns your team's style — Kiro scans existing codebases, tools (like Datadog or Figma), and workflows to understand preferences and standards.
- Spec-driven development — It generates code while seeking human confirmation or corrections on assumptions, building detailed specifications along the way.
- Persistent context — Unlike typical AI tools that forget after sessions, Kiro maintains memory across days, allowing it to pursue multi-day projects without constant input.
- Real-world impact — Assign it a complex fix affecting multiple systems, and it figures out the solution, writes the code, and iterates autonomously.
Early users like Commonwealth Bank of Australia and SmugMug report massive productivity boosts. AWS claims Kiro deepens its expertise over time, becoming a true team extension.
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