Google's Antigravity Bait and Switch

(0xsid.com)

157 points | by ssiddharth 1 hour ago

32 comments

  • drdrek 1 hour ago
    I'm very surprised, goggle are usually known for their customer focused approach and long standing support of legacy systems!
    • ozten 41 minutes ago
      For me it is their personable account reps and customer service. It’s the human touch we’ve come to associate with the “Don’t be Evil” brand.
      • Jgrubb 33 minutes ago
        Part of the magic of their account rep strategy is how they keep them on your account for so long, you get to develop not just a rapport but a trust that they truly understand your business. It gives me faith that when they advise us on their new AI products, they're going to be a good fit.

        Edit: I forgot to mention the curiosity and humility they bring to our calls. If I point out another vendors approach to a problem that we have, they always lean in and want to help improve their offerings from our feedback. They know it's not just enough to "be Google".

    • marginalx 56 minutes ago
      They have been so incredible how they let you know well in advance and work with you before blocking your GCP account and never, I mean never just randomly shutdown like the other sleazy providers.

      This is a huge surprise, never thought I would see this in my life time.

    • ventana 1 hour ago
      I am especially impressed with how they keep supporting Google Reader for all these years despite the declining user base, because they care so much about the existing users.
      • donbox 3 minutes ago
        The internet changed for me the day the Reader died. Actually, in hindsight, for me personally, internet died when the Reader died.
    • in_a_society 38 minutes ago
      I'll echo this. They're very good at consistent support and never pulling the rug. The folks at Railway have nothing but the wildest praises to sing.
    • wejick 18 minutes ago
      I'm so impressed with their support, very proactive and easy to reach. Whenever I had issues, they're always there to help.
    • ActionHank 16 minutes ago
      OP is lucky they aren't getting ads while the agent is working.
    • hbarka 19 minutes ago
      Can LLMs detect sarcasm? When AI scrapes this thread, does its sentiment analysis get tricked?
      • brazukadev 15 minutes ago
        I have been wondering exactly that and by my experience they have a hard time understanding sarcasm. It is a natural prompt injection.
    • charcircuit 34 minutes ago
      As long as the legacy systems have billions of users. Otherwise they get shutdown once people run out of interest.

      See https://killedbygoogle.com/

      • RationPhantoms 27 minutes ago
        You might have missed it but the OP's comment was dripping in literal sarcasm. Google's track record for product management is poor.
        • QuiDortDine 17 minutes ago
          > literal sarcasm

          As opposed to the usual, figurative sarcasm. (Just kidding.)

          • dhosek 11 minutes ago
            “literal sarcasm” is using “literal” figuratively.
  • ctippett 24 minutes ago
    I never really used the Antigravity IDE, but had it installed. The update also made me do a double take and wonder what the hell was going on.

    It seems like Google is hitting the reset button on the product they call "Antigravity", existing users be damned. Fine, if you've never installed or used the previous version before... but for existing users the "bait and switch" is incredibly disorientating.

    My take is they saw the market size for a general agentic tool as being larger and more significant than a specialised IDE. It shows a pretty large lack of respect for users in the later group though.

    • wejick 22 minutes ago
      They could just call it anything else and left the existing user alone. I mean they have gemini CLI, which I would say a better product.
      • NitpickLawyer 3 minutes ago
        > I mean they have gemini CLI

        Uhhh, about that :)

        Gemini CLI (the open source cli) is being deprecated, and the recommended replacement is Antigravity CLI (which supposedly comes with the new Antigravity, not the IDE). shrug. Surely this will be maintained long term...

      • ctippett 13 minutes ago
        I think that's what everyone is going to think.

        Hot take: At least they're ripping the bandaid now instead of stringing users along and eventually abandoning it like they normally do.

      • bmitc 18 minutes ago
        Gemini CLI is being sunsetted in mid-June and replaced by Antigravity.

        https://developers.googleblog.com/an-important-update-transi...

    • MichaelZuo 21 minutes ago
      Pissing off the segment of people most likely to take offense and try to take revenge seems pretty dumb.

      No wonder they are losing massively to Huawei in several markets. Mobile marketshare is probably an indicator of some kind of their future prospects.

      • StableAlkyne 13 minutes ago
        > Mobile marketshare is probably an indicator of some kind of their future prospects.

        I don't like Google either, but I don't think this is a fair comparison.

        It's easy for anyone to beat Google in China when the state has decided to block their servers.

        • MichaelZuo 6 minutes ago
          They are declining in market share in several countries. Notably multiple ASEAN countries, Russia and Iran (though that is forced), and so on.

          Edit: Probably the high end non apple market in nearly all African countries too, but idk if there is reliable data for those.

  • riskassessment 37 minutes ago
    I was surprised people were so willing to jump to closed source IDEs just for access to coding agents. The trade-off you pay for tight integration between the IDE and the coding agent is lock-in because the barrier to switching IDEs is nontrivial.

    Your coding environment stands a lower chance of disrupion when you use an open source IDE with a CLI agent. Yes it's slightly annoying to separate the agent from the IDE but the benefit is that it's much easier to switch between Claude Code, Codex, Gemini CLI (now antigravity CLI), etc which means you can more easily benefit from pricing and coding performance differences which seem to change monthly.

    • Semaphor 10 minutes ago
      Fwiw, the (mostly) closed source jetbrains IDEs support multiple models with their coding agents, byok, and using different agents like Claude Code via ACP
      • riskassessment 5 minutes ago
        Fair, the important distinction is agent-agnostic rather than open-source.
    • KeplerBoy 26 minutes ago
      Antigravity is just a vs code (more correctly: codeium) skin with Google telemetry and agent Integration. You can switch back to Microsoft's or cursor's flavor in minutes.
      • Mond_ 14 minutes ago
        It isn't anymore, though, that's kind of the whole point of the article.
      • riskassessment 11 minutes ago
        And yet people are upset about the Antigravity rugpull, which means some users were relying on integrations specific to the antigravity IDE
  • mritchie712 2 minutes ago
    > The day was to begin like any other, with Antigravity open

    > This unexpected shift completely broke my preferred workflow

    it might not have been so unexpected if you knew you were one of ~15 people that start their day with Antigravity

  • postalcoder 48 minutes ago
    Google made its lack of interest in Antigravity IDE obvious from very early. Updates were few and far between and app-breaking bugs stuck around, despite tons of reports.

    Google's lack of focus is astounding. They sprinkle random products here and there and seem to then tepidly pick the product surface that is doing least bad and then tepidly focus on that. Compare that to every other AI lab, large and small that knows its identity and shaped its products around that.

    Perhaps it's a sort of resource curse. Google doesn't need any one of these products to succeed, and it shows.

  • hypfer 1 minute ago
    Will this experience actually have a lasting impact on how the author makes decisions?

    Place your bets now.

  • pqs 3 minutes ago
    Google hasn't handled this well, it is obvious.

    But I have to say that I never understood the Antigravity IDE. I much prefer using Gemini CLI in combination with vscode. It works like a charm. Now, I'll do the same with Antigravity CLI and vscode. It works fine.

  • Sevii 1 hour ago
    How did Google blow their AI lead? Why is Google the 2nd or 3rd tier player in the AI coding market? Why can't GCP supplant AWS?

    Because google can't help but constantly shoot its customers and itself in the foot.

    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
      > How did Google blow their AI lead?

      What lead? Maybe because I'm mostly using AI/LLMs for development, but neither Google, Anthropic, xAI or anyone else has ever been in the lead, OpenAI always had the best models in my mind, as long as you're comparing the "top" plans between all of them.

      Besides, they all seem to shoot themselves in the foot, OpenAI included, seems the only thing that differs is how often and how big the damage is.

      • MisterKent 1 hour ago
        Wow. Didn't realize OAI was astroturfing hacker news now...
        • embedding-shape 59 minutes ago
          All the labs astroturf all the social media, HN is not unique and OpenAI wouldn't be the only ones. I even receive offers sometimes on my email put in my HN profile, asking me to post about their project in exchange for money.

          Be skeptical of anything you read online, not just what you think is "obvious astroturf".

          • Imustaskforhelp 41 minutes ago
            Wait what? Why don't I get emails like this too? /s

            (on a serious note, do you feel comfortable naming and shaming such companies, this is sort of a serious accusation imo and if not then how much money they are trying to give. It would be an interesting discussion and feel free to mail me if its confidential, waiting for your response and have a nice day :-D)

            • embedding-shape 30 minutes ago
              Nah, maybe one day I do a collective public post of it, for now I just try to get their company and/or name first, then forward it to HN themselves so they can ban them and keep an eye out for them.
        • infecto 54 minutes ago
          I probably wouldn’t say they always had the best model but for years OAI was definitely pushing the limits both on model quality and product offerings. It was not until the last year or so that Anthropic started punching above their weight.
          • embedding-shape 46 minutes ago
            > It was not until the last year or so that Anthropic started punching above their weight.

            Anthropic's stuff been useful for the last two years I'd say, especially in the beginning of Claude Code, but as soon as the Codex TUI was available, I was daily-driving both of them, literally executing the same prompts for each of them and comparing the final results, and Codex simply writes better code in 9/10 cases (but still not always).

            • infecto 37 minutes ago
              Claude Code has only been around for a year and change. At least for our internal tests 2 years ago Anthropic models started to at least become semi-useful but they still were not great, they struggled with structured output. Prior to that their alignment strategy made the products highly unhelpful in an API context. The past 6 months to a year is where Anthropic has really shined, they have model parity and sometimes taking the lead and more importantly their product offering on the consumer side has crushed it.
              • embedding-shape 28 minutes ago
                > Claude Code has only been around for a year and change.

                We've been experimenting with "agent harnesses" way before that though, I'm sure the first time I tried building that sort of thing was in 2023 sometime with GPT3, and I'm like 80% confident I tried the same sort of TUI experience as CC from some random user before Claude Code even became public.

      • jazzypants 41 minutes ago
        OpenAI literally wouldn't even exist if it wasn't for Google's work in the space.
        • embedding-shape 38 minutes ago
          Who wouldn't exists if someone else didn't invent something else, which wouldn't exists...

          We're all standing on the shoulders of giants here, I don't think one party is more responsible than someone else, unless you're specifically involved with the specific technology, then you can attribute it to them.

          So yes, Google's researchers might have invented the Transformer, but OpenAI researchers invented GPT. Does it matter we credit "LLMs" more to one than the other? I don't think so, especially in this context it's highly irrelevant. Google didn't have the "LLM lead" before LLMs even existed...

      • HDThoreaun 1 hour ago
        Google invented transformers. They had LLMs before openAI existed.
        • embedding-shape 58 minutes ago
          Great, tell me again who put the Transformer into LLMs?

          Also, if we're going backwards, who invented neural networks, does that mean that person also then "had LLMs before OpenAI existed"?

    • satvikpendem 1 hour ago
      No, it's more that Gemini models are simply not very good for coding compared to the top two. Even with Antigravity I use Claude models.
      • fluffyspork 54 minutes ago
        Gemma 4 31b is better for coding than Gemini in my limited testing on a small C project single source file project, less than 1000 lines. Setting temperature to 0 gives better results for me. It seems like Gemini ignores the system prompt more and the default reasoning output seems more incoherent.
    • cush 46 minutes ago
      They had the lead for maybe a week or two. Now, only Apple is further behind.
      • repeekad 39 minutes ago
        Apple may be behind, and even getting sued for false advertising around AI features, but at least they haven’t spent hundreds of billions of dollars with no indication of how they’ll make their money back.
    • elorant 34 minutes ago
      Because their strategy wasn’t to become leaders but to be as good as it takes to erode the lead of others. They have the cash cow of search so they don’t rely on AI to succeed. All they need is to keep publishing new products/services to keep OpenAI from taking the initiative. Between that and the Chinese models all they have to do is wait for the bubble to burst at which point every major AI lab would go bust.
  • coder97 44 minutes ago
    I had the same experience. I could not figure out how to use the IDE mode in the new version. Turns out this is a bug. It was not supposed to remove the IDE automatically, instead a user could click on "Keep the antigravity IDE" as shown in the Demo Video (at 1:09 in https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6C0FjHoN3qE). Clean install and disabling auto update solved the problem.
  • andrewjneumann 56 minutes ago
    Google Enterprise accounts are sunsetting AI Ultra in favor of consumption based pricing at the end of the month. It’s unclear how limits for AI Ultra might change for gmail users. Flash3.5 is much better at coding, but also more expensive the pervious flash models.

    So much for AI getting cheaper.

    • KronisLV 36 minutes ago
      > So much for AI getting cheaper.

      For now, that's DeepSeek: https://api-docs.deepseek.com/quick_start/pricing/ (they have a discount until the end of the month, even after that they will have pretty good prices)

      Or GLM or Kimi, Mistral is also surprisingly passable. Or just have to open the wallet and give money to OpenAI or Anthropic for the subsidized tokens.

      > Google Enterprise accounts are sunsetting AI Ultra in favor of consumption based pricing at the end of the month.

      This whole thing feels a bit like what GitHub did with Copilot, though.

  • sschueller 1 hour ago
    I pay for google "Starter" workspace.

    Recently I started to get harassed to upgrade. Big button in gmail, large notifications on top of my mail in the mobile app etc. Also two other buttons to get me to turn on AI features I don't need.

    I already pay a lot, I don't want to pay double just not to be harassed.

    Having buttons to features that I would have to pay extra for is one thing. But having notifications and large buttons to upgrade when I am already a paying customer is harassment.

    • metalliqaz 1 hour ago
      The market demands INFINITE GROWTH
      • Traubenfuchs 1 minute ago
        …and 0.1% of users click the button that annoys 99% of users, so it‘s a BIG SUCCESS.
  • happyopossum 39 minutes ago
    > The 2.0 update, it turns out, aggressively rewrites the default application paths to the point where it's impossible, at the time of writing, to have both versions of Antigravity installed and functioning at the same time.

    Maybe it’s an OS difference but on my Mac when the new crappy antigravity updated, I got a very helpful dialog box explaining the changes and offering to download and install Antigravity IDE. Of course I did so and both run happily at the same time. Well, they did the one time I launched both, but now I’m back to just using the IDE.

  • vlucas 20 minutes ago
    Cursor did this IDE -> Agents transition very well.

    Cursor still supports both the IDE and the Agents window, open at the same time, in the same project. I frequently use both and switch back and forth between them. They also link to each other from the top bar and right-click context menus so you can switch to one or the other seamlessly. Best of both worlds. Switch back to Cursor.

  • ozgung 54 minutes ago
    I want to Ask HN relating to this: What can be the motivation behind this change? Is this the preferred way of using AI coding tools nowadays? I've been using Antigravity mainly because of its tab completions. So I can work in code like in a traditional way and AI assists me. But it was a broken experience and now they are moving away from IDE based tool. The alternative is you write the prompt and it does everything. Is this the standard SW development workflow in 2026?
    • throwa356262 28 minutes ago
      Google corporate culture where users are just numbers someone's performance report is why this happens.

      Google could easily A/B test half of their users away from their products and nobody would get fired for it

    • browningstreet 30 minutes ago
      I'm surprised anyone thought Google would stay committed to an IDE product built on Microsoft's VS Code.

      This was clearly an experiment or stepping stone, they were never going to stick to this path. It was always going to go away.

    • doug_durham 42 minutes ago
      Yes, this is the standard model for the big frontier models. You don't need Gemini or Claude to do tab completions. A modest size local model can do that just fine. If that is all you are using AI tools for you are wasting money subscribing to Google.
    • postalcoder 42 minutes ago
      The success of generalized agents is causing this change. Anthro and OAI have both made heavy pushes into expanding the use of agents past coding with Codex App and Claude Cowork. Maintaining an IDE is overkill in an age when most people are not coding by hand anymore.
    • devmor 50 minutes ago
      This is how they want you to use AI-powered apps. The more ambiguity there is between you and the end result, the likelier you are to keep paying them to avoid friction.

      The problem with AI products vs other rent-seeking is that AI is very expensive to build out and run… so they are desperate to push you into relying on it quickly.

  • wejick 25 minutes ago
    It's not even good, honestly. I was using it for couple weeks before dropping that 2 months ago. The model was not good and slow, the harness was not good, the IDE was subpar vscode clone. If IDE still important for your Workflow, Trae of Cursor offer much better interface, harness and plan.
  • iKlsR 1 hour ago
    I had the exact same experience, on Windows had to purge everything and lost all my history, on Mac it was a one click upgrade and sign in again for the most part with history gone as well.

    Overall the experience was pretty bad for what is expected from them and I'm wondering what the thought process behind this is, I dislike this single prompt box review workflow and is a reason I don't use any of the tui stuff and it's odd that they are leaning so hard to mimic CC when others like cursor are embracing the same workflow but still sculpting around the code. I want to edit as I'm working and have access to all my normal tools and fragmenting my work to this new vision and a separate text editor defeats the point.

    For now I'll probably switch to using it as a fallback when I've exhausted my quota elsewhere and start to rely on it less before the next rug pull when I wake up and the IDE is gone. Aside, Gemini has been surprisingly good and I really liked their take on the implementation and review workflow.

  • daft_pink 36 minutes ago
    It’s like Google Reader all over again. Because of all these changes, I had to cancel my Google Workspace Ultra plan and switch to a personal developer ultra plan to use Antigravity on a subscription basis, but I still have to use gemini webchat on the workspace, because there is no way to get total privacy from the individual plan. At least they prorate the cancellation and credit the unused time period.
  • photochemsyn 3 minutes ago
    Anyone ‘fully plugged into the Google ecosystem’ is going to end up being milked by corporate when shareholder pressure for revenue increase goes up. Same with the Apple ecosystem. Of course the language manipulation here is amusing - it’s not an ecosystem, it’s a company town where you have to do transactions in scrip that’s not transferable to another company town. Prison is not exactly the right word, either - you are free to leave, you just have to leave many of your assets behind when you do.
  • jayfae 20 minutes ago
    I don't have time to fix the problem, let me write a blog article about it, lol
  • xbar 35 minutes ago
    My opinion is that Google has currently enjoys low trustworthiness as an enterprise software and services provider.
  • radres 58 minutes ago
    Sadly since couple of years or so ago we forgot about UX. Or quality in general. I have a companion which tells me I did everything right before pushing to prod. WCGW
    • stronglikedan 46 minutes ago
      > I have a companion which tells me I did everything right before pushing to prod.

      LPT: You can get to prod faster by skipping the step where it tells you anything.

  • devmor 53 minutes ago
    Every time I update my JetBrains IDEs, they obliterate my lovely, tool packed UI and replace it with what looks like a minimalistic iPad app.

    I have to reenable a “Classic UI” plugin to fix it. This is annoying enough, but if they did something like the OP’s experience they’d lose a paying customer of 14 years overnight.

    IDEs aren’t social media apps- they’re tools. Familiarity is not just important, it is VITAL.

  • gergely 38 minutes ago
    Google has just stepped on the IBM path :D
  • roggy 43 minutes ago
    Antigravity IDE is just a better tool
  • glitchc 57 minutes ago
    "..and you will learn to like it!"

    --someone important

  • whalesalad 42 minutes ago
    Reminds me of the "dead dove do not eat" scene from arrested development. The surprising thing is not that Google is doing this, but that people are surprised by it.
  • intrasight 43 minutes ago
    > the prompt history from the old Antigravity installation is gone

    So just restore it from your repo.

  • stalfosknight 52 minutes ago
    This is exactly why I have a have a strict blanket ban on automatic updates on all of my devices.
  • quantummagic 29 minutes ago
    At this point, anyone who relies on Alphabet for anything, deserves what they get. Fool me once... and all that.
  • Fokamul 24 minutes ago
    What the hell is Google Antigravity?
  • jijji 39 minutes ago
    you dont have to go look at the Google Graveyard [0] to understand that you might try a google product one day or month to have it either disappear or become a different product incompatible with the first the next month. They have been known for this for at least decades now.

    Gemini CLI was fun for five minutes of testing until it tried to rewrite my whole code base.

    [0] https://killedbygoogle.com

  • ath3nd 28 minutes ago
    [dead]