What happens when you stop giving AI a task — and give it a company?
There's a moment in every science fiction film where the machine stops waiting for instructions.
At Google I/O 2026, that moment happened live on stage — and it didn't feel like science fiction. It felt like watching the future quietly clock in for work.
Antigravity 2.0 was given a single directive: build an operating system. No team. No standups. No Jira tickets. Just one primary agent, 93 subagents it spun up itself, 15,000+ model requests, 2.6 billion tokens generated, and 12 hours on the clock.
The total bill? Under $1,000.
















