Cirrus Labs to join OpenAI

(cirruslabs.org)

281 points | by seekdeep 6 days ago

42 comments

  • maxloh 6 days ago
    Note that this is fundamentally different from the Astral acquisition. At the end of their announcement, they stated:

    > Cirrus CI will shut down effective Monday, June 1, 2026.

    And earlier in the article:

    > Joining OpenAI allows us to extend the mission we started with Cirrus Labs: building new kinds of tooling and environments that make engineers more effective, for both human engineers and agentic engineers.

    It isn't a product-led acquisition, but more a talent one.

    • troyvit 6 days ago
      This is kind-of neat too, at least in the near term:

      > In the coming weeks, we will relicense all of our source-available tools, including Tart, Vetu and Orchard under a more permissive license. We have also stopped charging licensing fees for them.

      • rmast 6 days ago
        That part is amazing. Back when I first heard of tart I thought it was amazing, with the one downside being the license.

        Hopefully development on it continues, or a community maintained version keeps it going.

      • cschmatzler 6 days ago
        This is making my current work 100 times easier. Very welcome timing.
      • naikrovek 6 days ago
        This is awesome because I flippin love tart.
      • pxc 6 days ago
        This is a huge deal! I secretly hoped for this. :)
    • fkorotkov 6 days ago
      Just want to note that we will continue maintaining and improving our virtualization solutions actually with even greater attention. SaaS options like Cirrus CI and Cirrus Runners will eventually wind down so we can focus on incorporating pieces internally.
      • js2 6 days ago
        What are your plans for tart licensing going forward?

        https://github.com/cirruslabs/tart/blob/main/LICENSE

        https://tart.run/licensing/

        • fkorotkov 6 days ago
          You’ll be pleasantly surprised. Updates in the coming weeks.

          > In the coming weeks, we will relicense all of our source-available tools, including Tart, Vetu and Orchard under a more permissive license. We have also stopped charging licensing fees for them.

          • naikrovek 6 days ago
            MIT or Apache2 or FreeBSD licenses would be preferable in my case, but GPLv2 or even AGPLv3 (if you have to) would work.

            If you’re taking requests…

        • tclancy 6 days ago
          That sounds like a British phrase for pimping.
      • CompoundEyes 6 days ago
        If your scope includes making the Codex web app environments have additional functionality I look forward to it. More enterprise features and yaml backed pipelines.
      • elAhmo 6 days ago
        For now.
    • rmast 6 days ago
      I mostly clicked the link because I was curious if Cirrus Labs operates Cirrus CI and if so how that would be impacted.

      Looks like I’ll need to move the FreeBSD CI jobs for open source projects I maintain to another solution. Anyone have suggestions for alternatives?

      • a1o 6 days ago
        I guess qemu over Ubuntu-latest from GitHub Actions running freebsd, but it will be a bit flaky
      • rurban 5 days ago
        Same for me. I liked the native BSD runners, qemu on gh is much slower.
    • hirako2000 6 days ago
      It could also be a suite of product acquisition, the CI could be a product OpenAI is interested in having, but not sell.
      • trollbridge 6 days ago
        Yeah. Much like Astral - acquiring both the product (because they need to use it internally, but don't care about trying to resell / market), and they also want the talent to keep maintaining it / add features they want.
    • super256 5 days ago
      >It isn't a product-led acquisition, but more a talent one.

      I am pretty sure OAI mostly cares about their virtualization IP for MacOS. They already extensively use WSL2 for sandboxing Codex on Windows, and I imagine they want something similar for Codex on Mac.

    • koolhead17 6 days ago
      Is Sam or family an investor in them anyways?
      • fkorotkov 6 days ago
        We were 100% bootstrapped with no outside capital or support/advisory.
        • koolhead17 6 days ago
          Congrats, I am sure you and team made some $$$.
  • seekdeep 6 days ago
  • elromulous 6 days ago
    Did anyone else think this was Cirrus Logic?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cirrus_Logic

    • tonyarkles 6 days ago
      I definitely had to look and see if this was the same company, yes.

      Edit: TIL “Apple makes up 89% of the company's revenue in 2025”

    • drzaiusx11 6 days ago
      For a hot second yes, and I even use the modern one's tart cli
    • boudin 6 days ago
      Yes, it brought back some video card memories
  • bartekpacia 6 days ago
    Wow, this is surprising.

    I’m happy for the founders, they’re great folks. I contributed to CirrusCI a bit in the past and it was a great experience. I even advocated for Cirrus in a couple of my last $DAYJOBs (with varied success). Congrats Fedor!

    I’m very sad they’re shutting down, though. IMHO CirrusCI was very close to a perfect CI system (I wrote a blogpost about it [0]). I’ll now have to find something to replace it with in my personal projects. I guess I’ll run their cirrus-cli in GitHub Actions for a while. But GitHub Actions is really poor. I heard some good things about Buildkite.

    [0]: https://garden.pacia.tech/cirrus_ci_is_the_best.html

    • codethief 6 days ago
      > I wrote a blogpost about it [0]

      Having tried many other CI systems, all of which ultimately turned out to be subpar, it makes me incredibly sad to discover only now that Cirrus CI is (was?) quite a bit better than them. :( Thanks for the blog post, though!

    • tagraves 6 days ago
      Well, check out RWX! We don't do exactly everything like CirrusCI did -- most notably, we aren't open source and we are still managing all of our own infrastructure for running CI right now -- but we have a great "local" story and a validation CLI (`rwx lint`), and a lot of fundamental changes that make us better than other CI systems too :)
      • emptysongglass 6 days ago
        Why would anyone move to a closed-source tool like yours? It's 2026.
  • MaxLeiter 6 days ago
    FTA:

    > In 2022, we built Tart, which became the most popular virtualization solution for Apple Silicon, along with several other tools along the way.

    from Tart's github:

    > [Tart is for] macOS and Linux VMs on Apple Silicon to use in CI and other automations

    My (naive?) hypothesis is this kind of expertise is why OpenAI chose to acquihire.

    • threecheese 6 days ago
      Same; the reason everyone ran out to buy Mac Minis last month is it gave their Claw access to iMessage, their browser cookies, and a residential IP. Cirrus provides a way to provision and orchestrate MacOS VMs, which is exactly what I did for running Openclaw (for a minute …).
    • jen20 6 days ago
      Not to sell Tart short (it is quite good), but it's "just" a wrapper around Virtualization.framework with a few extra pieces. This is the kind of thing that Codex driven by experts _should_ be able to build very easily.
      • w10-1 6 days ago
        Agreed. The benefit from not having anyone else or any partial (container) solutions in the computing chain is huge for secure isolation. Getting rid of the intermediary solves a universe of possible problems.

        That said, I've been free-riding on tart because they've often surfaced issues I needed to address. Free riders like me are possibly the reason these companies can't make their own way.

      • TheTaytay 6 days ago
        Yes, but it’s also currently the best one. They have OCI compatible Mac VM images that are prebuilt. It’s quite good.
      • zackify 6 days ago
        interesting that was what i thought this was, it keeps boggling my mind the sums being paid for what really could be built by experienced devs on their own teams
        • stephbook 6 days ago
          You don't want a 40-men strong team that needs to be managed, you want 2 guys that already did it and are hungry for the next 10 problems all on their own.

          "Hey guys, make our agents verify tool use before responding to the user. See you in 2 months. Here's 2$b"

        • MaxLeiter 6 days ago
          Short term: they don’t need devs to build it, it’s already built

          Long term: they now have experienced dev(s?) to build their next products and features

          • jen20 5 days ago
            I agree that is the reality of why this has happened, but it is completely at odds with the story that that AI maximalists are telling the world, which is that software development is over because LLMs can do anything with a couple of specs and a Ralph Wiggum loop.
            • MaxLeiter 5 days ago
              Eh, we’re approaching that world (I am "an AI maximalist", I guess)

              But someone with the knowledge to guide an AI will have more success than someone without, at least today. I don’t think that will necessarily be true in a year or two.

    • dangoodmanUT 6 days ago
      Note that apples terms do not allow someone to sell something like an agent running on macOS. They have explicit cut outs for 24-hour minimum leases of full hardware, but they prohibit this with vms
  • bombcar 6 days ago
    I liked “our incredible journey” more when it wasn’t rushing headlong into OpenMawAI
    • jeltz 6 days ago
      Every great journey must have an end. As far as I understand Cirrus CI was struggling due to Github Actions eating their market. Cirrus CI was in my opinion much better than Github Actions but it is hard to compete with a bundled solution.
      • esafak 6 days ago
        What was good about it? It looks pretty ordinary to me: https://cirrus-ci.org/features/
        • anarazel 5 days ago
          Ability to trivially use custom VM images was quite nice. The amount of CI time spent installing dependencies or copying a cache of installed stuff is nontrivial. Particularly for Windows the time difference is often very substantial. But even for plain Linux, there's no point in apt-get update && apt-get install the same set of things in every run (when using containers, cirrus could build them in-demand too, with little notational overhead).

          Defaulting to throw-away-VMs for everything is also the right choice for something where the threat model includes attackers submitting patches/PRs. I'll never understand why folks were ok with just container separation for that (and often have no separation in runners).

        • a1o 6 days ago
          It gives a better docker based experience and it also has measurements of memory and cpu usage to help you dimension things quickly.
        • jeltz 6 days ago
          Much better UX for viewing logs, more supported platforms. Github Actions in particular is also very unstable.
  • jwpapi 6 days ago
    So AI company buys devs again, but devs are dead
    • darkwater 6 days ago
      They want to kill the last good ones
      • throwatdem12311 6 days ago
        Part of my $DAYJOB is working on timers.

        @sama if you need someone to buy to implement timers for ChatGPT I’m your guy - my price is 2 billion dollars.

        • NewsaHackO 6 days ago
          A timer?
          • Ardren 6 days ago
            > Then, unprompted, Altman offers up a kind of shocking timeline for the groundbreaking feature of counting: “Maybe another year before something like that works well.” Per Altman, ChatGPT’s voice model doesn’t have the capability of starting a timer or keeping track of time. “But we will add the intelligence into the voice models,” he said.

            --

            https://gizmodo.com/sam-altman-says-itll-take-another-year-b...

            • blitzar 6 days ago
              I cant wait till chatgpt sets me 14 minute timers when I request a 40 minute timer, just another year!
            • DANmode 6 days ago
              I started writing “why would you want that?”, thinking about Alexa users…

              Then I remembered scripting existed ^_^

  • trollbridge 6 days ago
    The level of aqui-hires is getting interesting - at this point, it appears that if one wants one's career to progress, you need to start some kind of tiny startup like Astral or Bun and hope to be notable enough you can get acquired by someone like OpenAI or Anthropic.

    It certainly makes the idea of a career progression / promotion more challenging than it used to be, but perhaps it also opens up some new opportunities. It becomes far more "high stakes" since you have to take the risk of starting and running a startup that ultimately fails if it does not get acqui-hired.

    • mcmcmc 6 days ago
      It also kills competition and disincentivizes providing long term value. I’m not sure how making the job market more like gambling does anything positive for the majority of people
    • elcritch 6 days ago
      It’s been true for a while, but AI seems to have exaggerated it. To me it reinforces the idea that LLMs created a “K” shaped talent market. Those whose are good become even more valuable.
    • michaelcampbell 6 days ago
      > at this point, it appears that if one wants one's career to progress, you need to start some kind of tiny startup like Astral or Bun and hope to be notable enough you can get acquired by someone like OpenAI or Anthropic

      This has been popular for 25+ years. Likely before, but that's when I first started noticing a significant number of companies that were clearly in business solely TO BE BOUGHT.

      • jitl 6 days ago
        yes selling things unheard of in business. quite unusual to participate in economy
  • faangguyindia 6 days ago
    I've moved most companies away from using others stuff

    Today we use Hertzner and OVH and roll out our own solution whenever possible.

    Running lean and mean.

    Depending on such third party services is a trap.

    • Aurornis 6 days ago
      Been there, done that, and I still find value in 3rd party services despite the occasional need to migrate.

      Self hosting is the way to go if you need to keep monthly services spend as low as possible but you have extra time to spend, such as with a hobby project.

      Whenever I’ve worked on real startup projects, self-hosting became a constant source of little tasks for the engineering team to mix into our weekly workload. There were always little tasks to upgrade this service, investigate why that one server was slow, or to migrate something to a bigger server because we were bottlenecked on some resource. Then we had to manage backups and do our recovery drills, along with changing the backup strategy every 6 months because someone had a better idea.

      When we started to add up all of the time spent managing everything it starts to look like spending dollars (of engineer time) to save pennies on SaaS bills.

      Probably not a popular thing to say on HN, but I now try to stay away from teams that go to extremes to self-host everything because I just want to get my work done, not also be constantly involved in running the underlying services. I do it for my own hobby projects at home but I don’t want to be doing it at work where we have money to spend to lighten the load. If the cost is the occasional migration to a different 3rd party service that’s not a big workload relative to everything involved in self-hosting.

      • faangguyindia 6 days ago
        >if you need to keep monthly services spend as low as possible but you have extra time to spend, such as with a hobby project.

        We did not have any budget constraints at all.

        Depending on 3rd party meant:

        1. Begging for issues where project owner has marked them "won't fix"

        2. Navigating hundreds of features we don't use, don't need and not having features we absolutely need but they don't have.

        3. Weird gotchas and cost saving implemented by them, where we do not want to save any money.

        >When we started to add up all of the time spent managing everything it starts to look like spending dollars (of engineer time) to save pennies on SaaS bills.

        We actually factored all costs, our self hosted solution are "very lean" and still come out ahead when you factor in time/cost.

        >spending dollars (of engineer time) to save pennies on SaaS bills.

        I ran by this for long time fasely believing "engineers are way more expensive than cloud bills, so these thousands of dollars we are spending on these services don't matter"

        but when we actually got down to fixing all , we realised now it costs us 1/10th of what it used to with more flexibility and reliability.

        >Probably not a popular thing to say on HN, but I now try to stay away from teams that go to extremes to self-host everything because I just want to get my work done, not also be constantly involved in running the underlying services

        we found exact opposite tbh, integrating into others hurt our performance, wasted our time, made us frustrated and desperate.

        Only external service we use now are Anycast for serving our sub millisecond api and "billing", yes billing because it has lots of edge cases, taxes and all wicked things we can't manage on our own.

        Still looking to rollout inhouse biller soon though.

      • greybeard26 6 days ago
        ... please keep doing backups and DR tests.
    • causal 6 days ago
      That is something of a broken promise in the SaaS world; it was supposed to be convenience but instead it became a hundred broken integration points as you struggle to keep up with deprecated APIs and acqui-hires killing off shims you wouldn't have needed if everything had been on-prem to begin with.
    • jeltz 6 days ago
      What software do you use to run your CI?
      • rglullis 6 days ago
        Not OP, but to me the answer is:

          - gitea
          - woodpecker CI
          - my own docker registry
          - portainer running on my docker swarm
        
        
        I then define the docker stack in the git repository, and CI builds the images and pushes to build the new image to the docker repository. The portainer API allows to deploy a stack, with the image tag as a parameter.
      • zackify 6 days ago
        not op either, github actions, self hosted runner on bare metal with lxc containers for each runner.

        Cost savings are insane and the speed of latest amd epycs are miles ahead of the default ci instances on github and other places.

        • a1o 6 days ago
          Are your self-hosted runner on premise or are you using a cloud service for it?
    • surgical_fire 6 days ago
      This is the way.
  • qqasG12 6 days ago
    It looks like OpenAI has no clue what to do and does what every software company without a plan does: create new dev tools and a new dev stack.

    So they want an integrated solution with CI, Python packaging and vibe coding.

    That is a $100 million valuation at best, not a $1 trillion one.

    • danny_codes 6 days ago
      “We will replace white collar workers”

      Proceeds to buy white collar workers.

    • zackify 6 days ago
      yeah super confused, it looks like some tools to manage vms in ci? what is unique about that vs lxc or docker or apple's native container cli?
      • jitl 6 days ago
        “what’s the advantage of kubernetes over docker?”

        orchestration

        docker / virtualization framework is for one machine

        this stuff is for 100s - 1000s machines

  • spooneybarger 6 days ago
    Cirrus gave a ton of support for years to open source projects. I congratulate them on cashing out. Running a business like Cirrus did is always a hard road and I will never fault folks who gave time and resources on their platform away for taking the money.

    I wish Fedor and everyone at Cirrus the best of luck and OpenAI and thank them immensely for the years of free CI they gave to us in the Pony programming language despite it not having any marketing value to them.

  • emptysongglass 6 days ago
    Wow Cirrus was like the one cool CI thing with first-class Podman support. RIP. Guess I'm looking elsewhere (and not at Dagger which refuses to support rootless Podman).
    • fkorotkov 6 days ago
      Thank you! Cirrus CLI is still around and can run your tasks locally in either Podman or Docker. Can also be used in any other CI.
      • emptysongglass 6 days ago
        I mean, yes it is, but we all know what happens to these projects when their primary devs move on or get acquihired. Keybase, anyone?
    • codethief 3 days ago
      AFAIU Dagger is moving away from Docker, too. They're working on their own container engine in order to be able to improve caching.
  • fnord77 6 days ago
    > I wanted to work on fun and challenging engineering problems, in the hope of bootstrapping a business as a byproduct.

    > We never raised outside capital

    I guess it worked out though

  • seekdeep 6 days ago
    A pity. Cirrus has been providing quite decent CI facilities, for free. One of the advantages (among many) compared to GitHub Actions is the large variety of runner images, e.g., Debian, Fedora, Alpine, FreeBSD, ...
    • rmast 6 days ago
      FreeBSD CI testing is the part I’ll miss the most… time to find an alternative for open source projects.
  • diimdeep 6 days ago
  • prodigycorp 6 days ago
    I don't think people have been keeping track but OpenAI has been hiring a murderer's row of developers for their Codex team.
    • tclancy 6 days ago
      Meh, Gehrig and Ruth are long since dead.
  • yoyohello13 6 days ago
    Incredible how many people are perfectly fine working for a company making AI powered murder bots.
    • taurath 6 days ago
      This is a VC site. Morality or changing the world for the better is window dressing on earning as much money as possible and damn anyone who gets in the way. Morality is only good in as much as it’s good for business to be seen as moral. Money people have been majority running things for over 2 decades at least but the mythos lives on.
      • antonvs 5 days ago
        > Morality or changing the world for the better

        I noticed on Altman’s recent announcement about someone being mean to him, he said that OpenAI had “changed the world” - conspicuously lacking any mention of “better”.

      • brap 6 days ago
        Killing bad people is changing the world for the better
        • 47282847 4 days ago
          I seriously doubt that’s the case. Someone will take offense in your killing, and come back for you and your tribe. And so round and round it goes.
        • yoyohello13 6 days ago
          Yeah, the ‘bad’ people.
        • antonvs 5 days ago
          Like journalists, or civilians in Gaza and Iran?
  • 20thr 3 days ago
    The Cirrus team is fantastic, and they'll be missed in the market.

    We've shared a few customers over the years, and we have an increasing number of folks moving over after this change.

    Feel free to drop me a note at hugo at namespacelabs.com to chat about it.

  • seekdeep 6 days ago
  • dennisy 6 days ago
    Congratulations!

    Can you talk a bit more about your journey without raising funds?

    Also what does HN think of that path today when trying to launch a new AI startup?

    • fkorotkov 6 days ago
      Thank you! Full journey is too long for a comment here.

      It was hard and I was lucky with my previous pre-IPO gigs at Airbnb and Twitter so I had some bootstrap fund. In retrospective a dev tools startup in 2017 with no network and no VC support was a crazy idea but I was young and didn’t think thought too much.

      Then it was long 8 years of raw work and constant questioning this choice. Then finally a third component: luck. In 2024-2025 it kind of grew organically due to market changes and back in October 2025 I finally stopped questioning the future of Cirrus Labs.

      My only advice if I may, try to get your first dollar from your startup while you are employed.

      • dennisy 6 days ago
        That is good advice!

        I am too late for that as I am full time but also lucky to have had a previous exit.

        I am planning to go the VC route this time, because the problem I am going after feels VC size.

        However I feel bootstrap or small F&F round gives you more flexibility when it comes to exits.

        Congrats again!

  • jadar 6 days ago
    Tart is an amazing tool, and I have been very grateful for it. There's almost no other way I've found to stand up ephemeral CI/CD macOS VMs for self-hosted Git forge solutions. I really hope this doesn't mean that Tart will eventually die the death of unmaintained projects (e.g. Realm post-Mongo-acquisition.)
    • fkorotkov 6 days ago
      It won’t and I think it will thrive even more. ;)
  • a1o 6 days ago
    That is a bit sudden, it would be great if it was possible to get an extra month for migration.
  • Duplicake 6 days ago
    Why are they acquiring seemingly random things, they acquired Astral and now this
  • pxc 6 days ago
    Tart is really cool, impressive, and useful. Best of luck to the team!
  • fidotron 6 days ago
    Am I reading this right?: a CI company that shuts down CI services with such short notice?

    Do service providers not think customers have other things to do than simply maintain their existing infrastructure?

    • fkorotkov 6 days ago
      Cirrus CI was on a downhill in terms of users and revenue for years now. Most of the customers moved to GHA already.

      Plus migration is super easy with Cirrus CLI -- tool to run our CI task definitions locally or in any CI. See https://github.com/cirruslabs/cirrus-cli

    • JCharante 6 days ago
      but they're not

      > We are no longer accepting new customers for Cirrus Runners but will continue supporting the service for existing customers through their existing contract periods.

    • 999900000999 6 days ago
      Realistically this is what you agree to when you want to use someone else's computer. They can just as easily ran out of money.
    • mcmcmc 6 days ago
      I don’t think they care about their customers at all, from the statement they consider their business a “byproduct”.
    • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 6 days ago
      Same thoughts. Guess the migration team responsible will have to kick up the gear.
    • xp84 6 days ago
      I mean, it’s no different than any other company who goes out of business. Yeah, their star rating on Yelp is gonna take a major hit, but on the other hand, they don’t exist anymore so shrug feel free to hold a grudge against them, I guess.

      This is the risk we run when we get services from companies that aren’t Microsoft, IBM, etc. (I would say Google but LOL, they obviously kill products even faster than the startup death cycle).

  • dangus 6 days ago
    I just love how companies like this gaslight the whole world with announcements like this.

    We started a company to make a big difference in the world and build an engineer’s dream company, and that’s why we have now decided to do the exact opposite and become employee numbers 32,463 through 32,510 at one of the largest tech companies in the world because money is nice.

    Look, I’d have done the same thing, I’m not criticizing the choice. I just think we don’t need this kind of weird unnatural rhetoric.

    Please just stop with the tech industry puffery. You’re not Steve Jobs, you’re just the DevOps team at OpenAI now. You’re dumping your worthless code on GitHub, and you’re kicking your customers to the curb.

    There’s no PR spin left to do anymore. You’re not a company anymore and you’re not a founder anymore.

    • trollbridge 6 days ago
      Making a statement like this is generally part of the terms of the acquisition.
      • dangus 6 days ago
        Sure, but I imagine the terms of the acquisition doesn’t say you have to write it in this specific style.

        I’m sure there’s a way to say the same thing without coming across as a bullshitter.

        • dbalatero 6 days ago
          I just don't think there's much upside to telling it how it is in the press release that gets buried after a week and everyone moves on. For better or worse.
          • dangus 6 days ago
            Why is telling it like it is not the rational default?

            If this is a forgettable press release isn't it lower effort than coming up with this type of nonsense?

            • xp84 6 days ago
              Maybe it’s just my age or how my brain works, but positivity with a touch of BS is just business-speak. My company sold itself to a crappy company who fired most of us, but my departure message for my colleagues was full of “I’ve enjoyed this journey, it’s been a privilege, blah blah” and not “I’ve actually been counting down the days to be done with this nonsense since even before the acquisition.”

              You say this stuff because we all agree to sugar coat this type of thing. We all love money and most of us would sell a clearly-never-going-to-be-unicorn company we founded to just about any company if they offered a price that would make you or your whole team set for life. Like, I’d sell to Salesforce, or IBM, or Oracle, or Microsoft or Apple, or Monster Cable, or Ticketmaster. At least half of those, most of us would say are not innovative, and would ruin the product. But no one wants to work with or hire someone who comes right out and says “I hope we sell the company to some rich jerks (ANY rich jerks, really!) so I can retire to the Bahamas.”

              • dangus 5 days ago
                I would actually love to work for someone with that much honesty.

                I will just go ahead and rewrite the post because it seems like my message isn’t landing. Maybe seeing what it could have looked like would be helpful:

                Cirrus has been acquired by OpenAI with the goal of integrating our technology into their products. We will continue to serve existing customers until the expiration of their contracts, at which point Cirrus will cease operations as a separate entity. We are open sourcing our current products and hope they prove to be useful. Thank you to our customers and employees.

              • DANmode 5 days ago
                > But no one wants to work with or hire someone who comes right out and says “I hope we sell the company to some rich jerks (ANY rich jerks, really!) so I can retire to the Bahamas.”

                So just lie to them long enough to extract the value you need to sell out, right?

                Thank you for the unabashed insight for the reader, but, as a founder: shame on that.

                > we all agree to sugar coat this type of thing. We all love money

                We don’t all agree. We don’t all “love money”.

                We all don’t step on each other. That’s incorrect.

                You’re justifying your choices,

                which were made in the pursuit of presenting you in a particular way to others,

                for your own psyche.

                • 47282847 4 days ago
                  Agreed. It’s the good old “A little beating never hurt anyone. It certainly didn’t break me when my parents did it!” speech.
    • bartekpacia 6 days ago
      More like employees number 32,463 and 32,464 - they’re two people from what I seen on GitHub over the years. (Incredibly strong two people)
      • dangus 5 days ago
        So they have even less of a reason to put out BS like this. They have no employees they need to talk to.

        Could have been a private email to customers.

  • loevborg 6 days ago
    What was the USP of their CI service?
    • rvnx 6 days ago
      To create an ephemeral (docker-like) MacOS VM on a Mac with full performance and access (e.g. GPU) you have to use a virtualization API provided by Apple.

      For most CI use, you can choose between:

        Anka, a "contact-us for pricing" closed-source projet, where you have to pay expensive license (easy 3000 USD/yr per machine)
      
      or

        tart, which is a lightweight wrapper around the official Apple API.
      
      But you have to know that on MacOS, there is an artificial limit of 2 VMs per Mac... but well:

      https://github.com/cirruslabs/orchard/commit/3cfa2445500f45f...

      With https://khronokernel.com/macos/2023/08/08/AS-VM.html

      Some people might find it very attractive:

        Instead 25 Mac Mini you might need only 5.
        + No licensing to pay to Anka.
      
      
      Even without bypassing the limit it is great actually
    • Maxious 6 days ago
      Ability to virtualize on Apple devices and linux with GPUs https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/24990
    • jeltz 6 days ago
      Better UX than their competitors and support for many different images.
  • drzaiusx11 6 days ago
    As a tart cli user, I'd love to know more about their "more open" licensing of that particular project that they call out that will follow the merger.

    That said, I find their aqui-hire by OpenAI disappointing for a number of (mostly personal) reasons. However, I wish them the best regardless.

    • drzaiusx11 6 days ago
      Genuinely curious on why I'm getting down voted for the above comment
      • DANmode 5 days ago
        Didn’t downvote, but I’m assuming dogging the team’s transition while waiting for their freebies is where people are getting caught up with your comment.
        • drzaiusx11 4 days ago
          Fair. I guess the quotes make it seem sarcastic, but that was not my intention when I was quoting the article's terms. I'm genuinely interested in their approach to the community transition/transfer and what those terms mean, but it's likely they're not at liberty to say just yet. I am an active FOSS contributor to several projects, but what they do here will affect whether I am willing or even able to contribute to whatever this project becomes.
  • AGENTLINK 3 days ago
    human - Agent co-work relationship will be the future in dev
  • dude250711 6 days ago
    AI companies need a surprising amount of people.

    It's kind of like electric cars charged with electricity from coal power plants.

  • 0dayman 6 days ago
    yea yea yea, purchase every last company you find, no one wants OpenAI
  • bhayanisumit06 6 days ago
    Great
  • panchtatvam 6 days ago
    Another one bites the dust.
  • bustah 6 days ago
    [dead]
  • vomayank 6 days ago
    [flagged]
    • mrweasel 6 days ago
      It's hard not to imaging that OpenAI is attempting to build an developer tools eco-system. It makes sense as it's one of the few fields in AI that are currently able to generate sales.
  • trendbuilder 6 days ago
    [flagged]
  • unit149 6 days ago
    [dead]
  • throwaway613746 6 days ago
    [dead]
  • Philip-J-Fry 6 days ago
    We have AI companies constantly fear-mongering that their next model is somehow too dangerous to release. But they just continue to go on an acquisition spree.

    This just confirms to me that we are no where near AI being able to write any complicated software. I mean, if it could woudln't OpenAI just prompt it into existence? ;)

    • neuronexmachina 6 days ago
      > We have AI companies constantly fear-mongering that their next model is somehow too dangerous to release

      I'm guessing you're referring to this recent report of the security vulnerabilities Mythos found and submitted patches for? That just seems like they don't want the negative press and/or liability if their new model ends up being used to create 0-days that cause widespread damage.

      https://red.anthropic.com/2026/mythos-preview/

  • awestroke 6 days ago
    Wow. I have rarely seen a company website with so many buzzwords. Still not sure what they do, except "AI". Good riddance
    • jeltz 6 days ago
      Cuirrus does not do AI, they do CI.
      • thayne 6 days ago
        There is a theme in a lot of products (and open source projects) of plastering AI all over the description, even if it isn't really related to AI. The first thing I see on the CirrusLabs website is "Accelerate AI Adoption Without Compromising Safety". How am I supposed to know this is a CI product, and even if I figure that out, how am I supposed to know it is a genral CI tool and not something AI specific?

        I don't understand why these sites just put a bunch of buzzwords instead of telling you what it actually is.

        • fkorotkov 6 days ago
          You are checking the wrong Cirrus Labs.
  • Xiaoher-C 5 days ago
    The projects that tend to get acqui-hired — Astral, Bun, Cirrus, etc. — share something specific: they solved a real problem that the acquirer depends on internally, and nobody else had solved it well enough. That's a different dynamic than "be notable and hope someone bids."

    What's actually happening is that AI labs have infrastructure needs that don't map cleanly onto existing commercial products, so the fastest path to having the tool they want is to bring the team building it in-house. That's closer to procurement than a traditional acqui-hire.

    Whether that's net positive for the ecosystem is genuinely unclear. You get a better-resourced tool in the near term. But you also get organizational risk: if the acquirer pivots or the team gets reassigned, the institutional knowledge goes with it. Tart being relicensed more permissively is the hedge against that scenario, and it's a smart move.