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ZDNET's key takeaways
Entire launched a decentralized Git network built for agents.
The company plans to open-source its backend.
Coding agents are on the rise and pressurizing networks.
A new developer platform called Entire thinks it has the fix for an increasingly unreliable GitHub, and the pressure vibe coding puts on it: a decentralized Git network.
And who's at the helm? GitHub's former CEO, Thomas Dohmke.
GitHub has suffered many an outage in recent months as vibe coding has exploded and coding agents have overrun the centralized platform and its US-based servers. When an outage strikes, developers around the world have to put their work on pause. As coding agents show no signs of slowing down, GitHub is trying to scale up and meet demand, but it's unclear whether GitHub can keep pace.
Available in preview starting Wednesday, Entire's distributed Git network allows developers to host repositories from various points across the world. As with any decentralized network, the idea is that multiple hubs both distribute risk and improve speed and developer experience, especially for those tired of being beholden to GitHub. Entire works with Codex, Claude Code, Cursor, GitHub Copilot, and other popular coding agents, and stores session data alongside code.
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