Anysphere Inc. has rolled out a browser-based and mobile version of Cursor, its AI-powered coding assistant, enabling developers to launch and supervise fleets of autonomous “background agents” from any device. Users can assign tasks in natural language, track each agent’s progress through shareable links and merge completed code directly into their repositories. The release extends a rapid sequence of additions that began with background agents in May and a Slack integration in June, marking Cursor’s expansion beyond its integrated development environment. Paid subscribers—those on the $20-per-month Pro plan and the recently introduced $200-per-month Ultra tier—gain immediate access, while the free tier remains excluded. Cursor’s growth underpins the move. Anysphere says the service is generating more than $500 million in annualized recurring revenue and is used by more than half of the Fortune 500, including Nvidia, Adobe and Uber. Last month the company secured $900 million in new funding at a $9.9 billion valuation to accelerate product expansion. Head of Product Engineering Andrew Milich described the web launch as an effort to “remove friction” for enterprise users, while Chief Executive Michael Truell told Stratechery he expects AI coding agents to handle about 20 percent of a software engineer’s workload by 2026.