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Anysphere, the company behind Cursor, has acquired AI coding assistant Supermaven for an undisclosed sum.
Anysphere CEO Michael Truell announced the deal in a post on Cursor’s blog. Supermaven, he said, will enable Anysphere to launch a new version of its Tab AI model that’s “fast, context-aware, and highly intelligent,” especially at sequences of long code.
The Supermaven plugin will remain maintained, Truell said, though Cursor will become the core focus.
“This is roughly the same as Supermaven’s previous plan: the team had shifted focus to an editor, because extension APIs were blocking the next useful things that they wanted to build,” Truell wrote in the post. “Why join forces? We have a lot to do, and it seems like we can build a more useful product, faster, together.”
Superrmaven was founded by Jacob Jackson, who previously co-founded Tabnine, the AI coding assistant. After selling Tabnine to Codata in 2019, Jackson joined OpenAI as an intern, where he worked until 2022.
Supermaven is an AI coding platform along the lines of Tabnine, but with a few quality of life and technical upgrades. Its in-house generative AI model, Babble, can understand a lot of code at once, and, thanks to a custom architecture, is extremely low-latency.
Kyle Wiggers is a senior reporter at TechCrunch with a special interest in artificial intelligence. His writing has appeared in VentureBeat and Digital Trends, as well as a range of gadget blogs including Android Police, Android Authority, Droid-Life, and XDA-Developers. He lives in Brooklyn with his partner, a piano educator, and dabbles in piano himself. occasionally — if mostly unsuccessfully.
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