Hows your ability to get an enterprise to mandate their 5000 employees to use it? That's what most of these types of rounds are about.
I guess if I had to do it, I'd reject pushes without the requisite commit to entire/checkpoints/v1. I think their storage strategy is a bit clunky for that, but it can be done. I might look to do something more like the way jujutsu colocates its metadata. I don't think this particular implementation detail makes too much of a difference, though. I got along just fine in a regulated environment by setting a policy and enforcing it before git existed. Ideally, we'd do things for a good reason, and if you can't get along in that world, then it's probably not the right job for you. Sometimes you've got to get the change controls in order before we can mainline your contributions because we have to sustain audits. I don't think this is about forcing people to do something that they otherwise wouldn't do if you told them that it's a requirement of the job.
(I will give the agent boom a bit of credit: I write a lot more documentation now, because it's essentially instruction and initial instruction to anything else that works on it. That's a total inversion, and I think it's good.)
The bigger problem is, like others have said, there's no one true flow. I use different agents for different things. I might summarize a lot of reasoning with a cheap model to create a design document, or use a higher reasoning model to sanity check a plan, whatever. It's a lot like programming in English. I don't want my tool to be prescriptive and imposing its technical restrictions on me.
All of that aside: it's impossible that this tool raised $60 million. The problem with this post is that it's supposed to be a hype post about changing the game "entirely" but it doesn't give us a glimpse into whatever we're supposed to by hyped about.
2. Don't put it in the message. Put it in files.
Then later if it goes off piste in another session tell it to re-read the ADDs for x, y and z.
If someone could make that process less clunky, that would be great. However it's very much not just funnel every turd uttered in the prompt onto a git branch and trying a chug the lot down every session.