AI IDE News: Cursor Bugbot Speed Upgrades & Enterprise Teams

Mid-June 2026 Brings Massive Upgrades to AI Workflows

Welcome back to the PorkiCoder blog! As developers continue to lean on AI agents to ship code faster, the tooling ecosystem is evolving at breakneck speed. This week in mid-June 2026, we are seeing some incredibly practical updates hit the market, particularly for teams relying on automated pull request reviews and visual editing. If you are looking for an AI IDE experience with zero API markups and a flat $20/month fee where you just bring your own key, PorkiCoder is still the most transparent deal in town. However, we always keep a close eye on the broader landscape, and right now, Cursor is shipping some major quality-of-life improvements that developers should know about.

Bugbot is Now Faster, Cheaper, and Smarter

The most exciting news this week comes from a June 10 release on the Cursor Blog. Cursor's automated PR reviewer, Bugbot, has received a massive performance upgrade powered by their new Composer 2.5 model and significant agent harness improvements.

The performance statistics are impressive. According to the release, Bugbot is now over 3x faster, costs 22% less to run, and actually finds 10% more bugs per review, jumping from 0.56 to 0.62 bugs found on average. The typical review time has plummeted from around five minutes down to just 90 seconds. For engineering teams relying on AI to catch logic errors before they hit production, reducing that feedback loop to a minute and a half is a huge productivity win.

Cursor also introduced a highly requested workflow fix. Previously, Bugbot would re-review the entire pull request every time a new change was pushed, which sometimes resulted in new flags on code it had already approved. You can now configure Bugbot to exclusively review the exact diffs that are new since the last review. Additionally, developers can run Bugbot locally before they push code. By utilizing the new /review command in the editor, you can trigger a local code check. If you then open a pull request with that same diff, Bugbot recognizes the code, skips the duplicate remote review, and simply leaves a comment noting it has already been checked. It is worth noting that Bugbot still respects organizational model block lists, automatically falling back to the next best model if Composer 2.5 is disabled.

Enhancing the UI with Design Mode Improvements

Cursor is also doubling down on visual editing capabilities. Following the recent rollout of their browser-based Design Mode, a June 5 changelog update introduced two powerful workflow enhancements for frontend engineers.

  • Multi-Select Elements: You can now click on two or more elements simultaneously within the browser interface. Cursor immediately sees the selected elements, their underlying code, the surrounding visual layout, and how they relate on the page. This allows you to prompt the agent to make components match each other, strip out repeated content, or adjust grouped components in one go.
  • Continuous Voice Input: The microphone now stays active while an agent is mid-run. This means you can continuously narrate UI changes and queue up the next visual adjustment by voice without awkwardly waiting for the previous generation to finish.

Scaling Up with Enterprise Organizations and Groups

As AI coding tools mature from individual productivity boosters to company-wide platforms, enterprise management becomes a top priority. On June 3, the team announced Organizations for Cursor Enterprise to solve administrative fragmentation.

Previously, managing multiple departments or subsidiaries in the IDE was a disjointed experience. Now, an "Organization" serves as the top-level container for a company's identity and billing. Administrators get a single unified dashboard to manage their entire setup, including a complete rollup of token usage and spend across every team. Administrators can set different security, governance, budget, and feature controls for each specific team under the main umbrella. Users can seamlessly belong to multiple teams with different roles in each.

To add even more flexibility, this update also introduced "Groups." Groups serve as a lightweight collection of users that can sit across or within existing teams. They give cohorts of users separate model access, custom spend limits, and specific agent permissions without the administrative overhead of standing up a whole new team. If a user belongs to more than one team or group, the system intelligently defaults to the most permissive setting available to them.

Wrapping Up

It is abundantly clear that AI IDE vendors are focusing on raw execution speed, seamless UI adjustments, and enterprise scalability this month. Cutting a PR review time from five minutes to 90 seconds shows just how quickly model inference, parallelization, and agent harnesses are improving behind the scenes.

At PorkiCoder, we absolutely love seeing the developer tooling ecosystem thrive. If you want to experiment with the latest AI workflows without worrying about hidden subscription surcharges or opaque token pricing, remember that PorkiCoder is built from scratch for maximum speed. Just plug in your own API key, pay a flat $20 a month for the IDE, and enjoy zero API markups on your token usage. Happy coding!

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