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Augment-ing yourself with Remote Agents

Remote Agents in Augment Code now run autonomously from VS Code, handling parallel tasks like bug fixes and PRs—boosting dev workflows even while you're offline.

Dion Almaer

·13 Jun 2025·4 min read

2025 sure is the year of Agents, Agents, Agents… or as Kent Beck likes to call them… Genies:

We wanted to quickly highlight one of the agents that you may not have explored.

Augment Code has been consistently shipping Agents, starting with local ones that run inside your IDE and then remote ones that run independently in a containerized environment that you can configure.

These Remote Agents just reached general availability in VS Code (Augment Code supports JetBrains and vim editors for most of the features… but VS Code is often where you first see a new feature with a fast follow in the others!).

These agents perform tasks asynchronously, such as bug fixes, refactoring, test generation, and documentation, simultaneously producing review-ready pull requests—even after developers have closed the laptop lid and popped off for a bevy.


A Quick Look at Augment Remote Agents

Remote Agents stand apart by offering:

  • Parallel Task Execution: Multiple agents work simultaneously, significantly boosting productivity.
  • Deep Semantic Context: Precise understanding of complex, multi-repository codebases.
  • IDE Integration: Seamless control from VS Code, including real-time monitoring and SSH access.

Matt Ball recently highlighted the practical impact, tweeting: "Augment Remote Agents are changing how quickly our team ships features. Launch agents before leaving, wake up to completed PRs ready for review!" (source)

The best way to grok local and remote agents is to see them in action, and a short overview is provided by Anshuman


Remote Agents vs. Codex, Claude Code, Devin, and OpenHands

Augment’s offering is surrounded by others in the arena. Those that started as CLIs are growing remote capabilities, and those that started remotely are building out CLIs!

  • OpenAI Codex: Lightweight parallel execution without IDE integration or deep contextual memory.
  • Claude Code: Strong reasoning and deep context, typically sequential via CLI. However, community projects like Claude Squad allow running multiple Claude instances simultaneously, somewhat alleviating the sequential execution limitation. Launch within VS Code and you will see it come to life there too.
  • Devin: Offers full autonomy, planning, and coding, with integration into collaboration tools like Slack and GitHub, but can introduce workflow delays.
  • OpenHands: Open-source autonomous agents, with sandboxed execution and full workflow autonomy.

In comparison, Augment's Remote Agents provide a solid combination of autonomy, parallel task handling, deep semantic context, and integrated IDE experience, perfectly suited for enterprise and professional teams.

If you’re curious to see more, Augment offers a free trial. Feel free to test it, and share your experience in our Discord community!

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Dion Almaer

Field CTO at Tessl, previously built developer products at Google, Shopify, Mozilla

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A Quick Look at Augment Remote AgentsRemote Agents vs. Codex, Claude Code, Devin, and OpenHands

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Dion Almaer

Field CTO at Tessl, previously built developer products at Google, Shopify, Mozilla

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