I'm on the Python advocacy team at Microsoft, so I've been experimenting a bit with the new framework. It works pretty well, and is comparable to Langchainv1 and Pydantic-AI, but has tighter integrations with Microsoft-specific technologies. All the frameworks have very similar Agent() interfaces as well as graph-based approaches (Workflow, Langgraph, Graph).
I can flesh that out if it's helpful. I find it fascinating to see where agent frameworks converge and diverge. Generally, the frameworks are converging, which is great for developers, since we can learn a concept in one framework and apply it to another, but there are definitely differences as you get into the edge cases and production-level sophistication.
Curious what people see in these frameworks in 202(6). My experience has been that an agent is a simple while loop over tools/instructions/dialog. More complex integrations generally lie in the tools/context retrieval - but those have so far been so domain specific that it’s not worth pulling in a framework.
> Agent Framework offers two primary categories of capabilities:
> AI agents: Individual agents that use LLMs to process user inputs, call tools and MCP servers to perform actions, and generate responses. Agents support model providers including Azure OpenAI, OpenAI, and Azure AI.
> Workflows: Graph-based workflows that connect multiple agents and functions to perform complex, multi-step tasks. Workflows support type-based routing, nesting, checkpointing, and request/response patterns for human-in-the-loop scenarios.
You can do specialized SLMs with different roles working on problems. Also deterministic workflows. That is what I gathered its use. I know last year, multi-agent scenarios were topping to benchmarks but I don't know if 2025 has been the same.
Anything beyond this is usually a play to trap you into an ecosystem. No reason to adopt any of these frameworks, especially if you already have a mature workflow system.
I have used this in a “beta” feature for an enterprise app and really like it. In ~100 lines of code I have a secured OpenAI compatible endpoint that I can chat with, and write tools for in .NET. I have it doing natural language query over some data and it works quite well.
You can also expose the agents as MCP, AGUI and so it can be a tool you integrate with other AI platforms.
I remember when "Microsoft Agent" meant the APIs that gave rise to Clippy, Rover, and (regrettably) even Bonzi Buddy.
The bitter irony is, Microsoft has since embrace-extend-extinguished Bonzi Buddy spyware tech, building it right into Windows 11. So... they're moving onward to the future I guess?
I've toyed with the idea of hooking up something like Copilot to Clippy to make an "agent" using the Microsoft Agents API.
Unfortunately, the API died in Windows Vista, and was only widely available in Windows XP at the latest.
API documentation seems rather sparse too, though it looks like an LLM somewhere found a pirated book or something with example code because generated code seems to understand the API and its restrictions decently well. Writing the kind of C++ that still compiles on old versions of Windows is what broke my will to finish the project, though.
Certainly not better… it’s a one person project after all… but I have a workflow in typescript solution, not quite ready for prime time at workglow.dev. I’ll have AI agent stuff both in the framework and the UI (it’s feature flagged off at the moment) in January/February time frame.
The site above only runs local in browser models and uses a local user account. So it’s easy for infinite people to play with and costs me nothing to host.
It’s still a ways away from a Show HN post, and is more capable with remote frontier models, or with gguf over onnx (maybe?) whenever I get the local app out.
[+] [-] pamelafox|3 months ago|reply
I have a repository here with similar examples across all those frameworks: https://github.com/Azure-Samples/python-ai-agent-frameworks-...
I started comparing their features in more details in a gist, but it's WIP: https://gist.github.com/pamelafox/c6318cb5d367731ce7ec01340e...
I can flesh that out if it's helpful. I find it fascinating to see where agent frameworks converge and diverge. Generally, the frameworks are converging, which is great for developers, since we can learn a concept in one framework and apply it to another, but there are definitely differences as you get into the edge cases and production-level sophistication.
[+] [-] piskov|3 months ago|reply
> It brings together and extends ideas from Semantic Kernel and AutoGen projects, combining their strengths while adding new capabilities
… and giving a hint what will happen to the aforementioned projects.
—
It’s a shame when someone’s promotion is tied to how many new things they ship.
—
> To learn more about migrating from either Semantic Kernel or AutoGen, see the Migration Guide from Semantic Kernel and Migration Guide from AutoGen.
It seems the motto of Microsoft for the last 15 years: “You won’t have time for new features — all you’ll do is migrations.”
[+] [-] nlawalker|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] lumost|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] diwu1989|3 months ago|reply
If you use it with OpenAI responses api, there’s not even any need to store input items in your own DB
[+] [-] dmos62|3 months ago|reply
> AI agents: Individual agents that use LLMs to process user inputs, call tools and MCP servers to perform actions, and generate responses. Agents support model providers including Azure OpenAI, OpenAI, and Azure AI.
> Workflows: Graph-based workflows that connect multiple agents and functions to perform complex, multi-step tasks. Workflows support type-based routing, nesting, checkpointing, and request/response patterns for human-in-the-loop scenarios.
[+] [-] mycall|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] campbel|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] catlover76|3 months ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] shireboy|3 months ago|reply
You can also expose the agents as MCP, AGUI and so it can be a tool you integrate with other AI platforms.
[+] [-] dangoodmanUT|3 months ago|reply
Said nobody?
[+] [-] bitwize|3 months ago|reply
The bitter irony is, Microsoft has since embrace-extend-extinguished Bonzi Buddy spyware tech, building it right into Windows 11. So... they're moving onward to the future I guess?
[+] [-] jeroenhd|3 months ago|reply
Unfortunately, the API died in Windows Vista, and was only widely available in Windows XP at the latest.
API documentation seems rather sparse too, though it looks like an LLM somewhere found a pirated book or something with example code because generated code seems to understand the API and its restrictions decently well. Writing the kind of C++ that still compiles on old versions of Windows is what broke my will to finish the project, though.
[+] [-] WarOnPrivacy|3 months ago|reply
I remember Microsoft Agents as the enforcement arm of the Business Software Association.
They'd perform copyright raids on small biz, typically after some disgruntled employee phoned in an infringement tip.
[+] [-] unknown|3 months ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] unknown|3 months ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] tjpnz|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] randv|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] somedumbguy22|3 months ago|reply
[0]: https://google.github.io/adk-docs/
[+] [-] sroussey|3 months ago|reply
The site above only runs local in browser models and uses a local user account. So it’s easy for infinite people to play with and costs me nothing to host.
It’s still a ways away from a Show HN post, and is more capable with remote frontier models, or with gguf over onnx (maybe?) whenever I get the local app out.
[+] [-] linkage|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] mooreds|3 months ago|reply
Got part way through their tutorial, seemed okay. Haven't used it in prod, though.
0: https://mastra.ai/
[+] [-] zkmon|3 months ago|reply
[+] [-] Izikiel43|3 months ago|reply
It’s a modern cross platform open source language with very good performance
[+] [-] rubenvanwyk|3 months ago|reply