Meet Asimov: The AI Agent Revolutionizing Software Development Tracking

Reflection AI, a startup by ex-Google DeepMind researchers, has launched Asimov, an AI agent that goes beyond code to analyze emails, messages, and reports in software development. Asimov aims to enhance software assistants and pave the way for superintelligent AI. With a team including CEO Misha Laskin and CTO Ioannis Antonoglou, Asimov outperforms competitors in developer surveys and offers unique features like 'Asimov Memories' for team knowledge storage.

Jul 17, 2025 - 17:08
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Meet Asimov: The AI Agent Revolutionizing Software Development Tracking

Max is the managing editor of THE DECODER, bringing his background in philosophy to explore questions of consciousness and whether machines truly think or just pretend to.

Reflection AI, a startup founded by former Google DeepMind researchers, has introduced a new AI agent called Asimov.

Unlike other coding assistants, Asimov is designed to analyze not just code, but also emails, Slack messages, project status reports, and other technical documentation to map out exactly how software is built. The company says this approach could lead to more powerful software assistants and pave the way toward the development of superintelligent AI systems.

Reflection’s founding team includes CEO Misha Laskin and CTO Ioannis Antonoglou, both of whom previously worked at Google DeepMind. Laskin contributed to Gemini and various AI agent projects, while Antonoglou worked on reinforcement learning methods like those behind AlphaGo.

In an internal, non-independent survey, developers preferred Asimov’s answers 82 percent of the time, compared to 63 percent for Anthropic’s Claude Code (Sonnet 4). Asimov also outperformed Cursor Ask, another competing tool.

Reflection is taking a different approach from most existing AI agents. While the industry’s focus has been on code generation, Asimov is built to understand code and the full development process.

To do this, Asimov relies on a deep-research architecture that can handle large volumes of information. The system uses multiple 'retriever' agents to extract relevant details from vast codebases, then passes those findings to a single 'combiner' agent that synthesizes the information into a coherent response. The goal is to create a persistent memory structure for a development team’s collective knowledge, including decision logs and business context.

A key feature is 'Asimov Memories,' which lets developers store internal team knowledge with prompts like '@asimov remember X works in Y way.' These memories are protected by a role-based access system that controls who can add or modify content. According to Reflection, this is a departure from other agents that mostly adapt to individual developer preferences.

Asimov currently runs on open-source models further trained by Reflection using reinforcement learning with both human-annotated and synthetic data. The company says customer data is not used for training. To protect sensitive information, Asimov is deployed within the customer’s own virtual private cloud. Reflection is also developing proprietary models for future releases.

According to the source: the-decoder.com.

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