According to Dynamic Insight monitoring, Factory has announced the launch of Factory 2.0, shifting its product positioning from an assistant tool for individual programmers to a "Software Factory" that spans the entire development process. The new system aims to connect the entire software lifecycle, including requirements analysis, code development, testing security, deployment, and operation monitoring, to achieve fully automated development pipeline operation. For example, when a bug report or user feedback is received, the system can automatically identify and generate a repair plan, and automatically deploy the fix after completion of coding and security scanning.
To accommodate the complex technical and security requirements of enterprises, Factory 2.0 is not tied to any large models. Enterprises can specify the use of different bases at different stages, and can also automatically allocate resources based on cost and speed through an intelligent router. In terms of data control, the new version supports Bring Your Own Key (BYOK), on-premises privatization, and fully physically isolated deployment to ensure that sensitive code does not leave the intranet. Each code review and online troubleshooting data is kept locally for model self-learning and iteration.
For task scheduling, the system divides authority into different levels, with simple daily modifications being directly executed by the Droid intelligence, and complex development involving several days of work and multiple business lines being handed over to the "Missions" system for multi-agent collaboration and parallel resolution. Currently, Factory has been implemented and is operational in production environments at companies such as NVIDIA, Adobe, Palo Alto Networks, Ernst & Young, Wipro, and Adyen.
