Verifying frontend changes always meant a mental context switch: write code, alt-tab to a browser, poke around in DevTools, switch back. Even with a decent dev server, the loop was still manual — and for AI agents, it was essentially broken. Agents could write unit tests for logic, but verifying whether a button actually renders, whether a dialog triggers, or whether a layout holds up? That required a human in the loop. I first tried to tackle this problem by using the Playwright or Chrome Dev-Tools MCP server, but with the February 2026 release of VS Code (1.110) , that changes. Agents can now open, interact with, and inspect your running application directly inside VS Code's integrated browser — closing the development loop without any manual hand-off. How it works When browser agent tools are enabled, Copilot gains access to a set of tools that let it read and interact with pages in the integrated browser. As the agent interacts with the page, it sees updates to page co...
If you've been following the GitHub Copilot ecosystem, you've probably heard of the Awesome GitHub Copilot repo . It launched back in July 2025 with a straightforward goal: give the community a central place to share custom instructions, prompts, and chat modes for tailoring Copilot's AI responses. A lot of people contributed. As a result, the repo now contains 175+ agents, 208+ skills, 176+ instructions, 48+ plugins, 7 agentic workflows, and 3 hooks. And now the maintainers took it one step further and created an Awesome GitHub Copilot website and Learning hub . A website that actually helps you find things The new site lives at awesome-copilot.github.com and wraps the repo in a browsable interface built on GitHub Pages. The headline feature is full-text search across every resource — agents, skills, instructions, hooks, workflows, and plugins — with category filters to narrow things down. Each resource has its own page with a modal preview, so you can see exac...