Entire, the developer-platform startup founded by former GitHub chief executive Thomas Dohmke, has launched a preview of a distributed Git network built for the age of AI coding agents. The pitch is to spread code hosting across regions rather than lean on a single central provider.
The reasoning is a familiar strain in the agent era. As more coding agents clone and pull code at once, central hosts start to buckle, a pressure GitHub itself felt when it froze new Copilot sign-ups as agentic usage broke its economics.
Entire’s answer is a mirror. The preview, open under a waitlist with active regions in the US, EU and Australia, lets a developer mirror an existing GitHub repository in one step, leaving the code where it is while agents clone and pull from a regional Entire copy instead.
The point is to offload heavy, concurrent read traffic so agents can keep working without hitting rate limits. In the coming months, the company says, it will let developers host new public and private repositories natively.
The longer-term ambition is fuller decentralisation. Entire plans to build out a network of interconnected nodes that would let teams keep code in-region for data residency and sovereignty while remaining part of a single global system.








