Our Data Engineering Byte Newsletter gives data engineers and practitioners what they often lack today: clear, real-world insights—where every byte tells a story.Subscribe here to stay ahead in data engineering. Loco for CoCo: What Snowflake Summit 2026 Was Really About By Augusto Rosa, Snowflake Data SuperHero and Head of Data, Cloud and Security Architecture at Archetype Consulting Tl;dr Summit 2026 was a victory lap for Snowflake CoCo, the coding agent that went from launch to more than 7,100 accounts in four months but the bigger story is what sits underneath it, a stable platform that now carries an enterprise agentic layer easy enough for anyone to use, and an application platform that enterprises are already running internal tools on. The uncomfortable questions on the floor were about BI tools and standalone data catalogs. In my view, BI survives at least next year. Executives still need their KPI dashboards. Catalogs have a harder conversation coming as a standalone tool. CoCo's Breakout Year More than 20,000 people came through Moscone Center over four days, and the energy was the best I have felt at a Summit. Walk the expo floor, and almost every booth led with the same word: agentic. When every vendor reaches for the same adjective, it stops carrying information, but the repetition tells you what everyone is talking about. The side events reflected the same thing. The AI sessions I attended were full of legitimate questions, less what model should I use, more where is the business benefit, how do I get started, and how do I prove it. The product Snowflake chose to celebrate was CoCo. Cortex Code launched in February and grew to more than 7,100 accounts in four months, the fastest-growing product in the company's history. At Summit, it officially picked up the CoCo name, which insiders had been using for a while. The Summit announcements were about meeting builders wherever they work: a desktop app, an Excel plugin, a VS Code extension, a Claude Code marketplace entry, and a Slack bot. For me, CoCo is even better than Cloud Agents. Tasks run in isolated containers inside Snowflake's perimeter, async and scheduled, so a pipeline build keeps going after you close your laptop. That was the difference between the agent that helps me code and the agent I can deploy on calls. I am already busy planning an agent who will do a lot for me when I engage with my clients, and make me even more efficient. Easy agents, boring platform The rebrand pair tells you the strategy. CoCo is the control plane for builders. Snowflake Intelligence became CoWork, the control plane for everyone else: one personal agent with routing, memory, scheduled tasks, and governed artifacts you can certify and publish, with Deep Research soon in GA. CoWork is easy to use because the hard parts are embedded into the platform. Horizon AI guardrails went GA with protection against prompt injection and jailbreaking across both agents. Agent identity, in preview, gives every agent action a traceable identity in the audit log, so you can tell an analyst ran this from an agent ran this at a glance. Intent-driven governance lets you state protect all PII and have Snowflake write and maintain the policies. Underneath all of it sits the platform improvements: Adaptive Compute sizing warehouses from a performance target, a new query compiler with roughly 40x faster compile times. The Snowflake product mantra of making the product easy to implement still applies, and it was clear across the announcements. I still found myself asking the product teams to push even further in places like Iceberg. They are. Snowflake's Application Platform Takes Shape The least flashy announcements were very neat and useful. App Runtime, now in preview, runs Node.js and full React apps next to the data, deployed with a one-line command. Streamlit in Snowflake went GA on the container runtime. Snowflake Postgres is GA, with managed mirroring into the analytical engine in preview. Put it together, and you have data, transformation, agents, and the application itself inside one security perimeter. Enterprises are already using this for internal tools, and that is the right first market as internal tools require more internal data and need to be secured. That progression explains the question I was asked more than once on the floor: what is the point of BI tools now? My answer is that they are still around next year, and not just out of inertia. Tools like Sigma are useful precisely because they are moving in the same direction, letting customers build applications on top of the spreadsheet interface. I have seen teams replace accounting workflows that lived in Excel with Sigma applications. BI may not be dying, but it is being squeezed from two sides: agents are taking the ad hoc questions, and application platforms are absorbing the operational workflows. The middle that remains is smaller than vendors would like, but it is still big. Why Context Is Becoming the Real Moat Shravan Deolalikar posted three takeaways from the Summit that are worth mentioning as well. First, governance is shifting from can this user access this data to should this agent perform this action, which is a different question requiring different machinery. Second, everyone is converging on the same destination: Snowflake, Atlan, ServiceNow, and Salesforce are all positioned as the context orchestration and governance layer for agents. Third, metadata extraction is commoditizing, and the hard part is encoding the business model, so platforms with opinionated industry ontologies will win. One exhibit that caught my attention at Summit. "The Battle for the Dataverse" captured a theme that showed up repeatedly throughout the event: context, interoperability, and who ultimately owns the layer that helps agents understand business data. I agree with all three, and I would push the second one further. Snowflake is betting on keeping context inside the platform. Horizon Context collects semantic views and metadata from dbt, Tableau, and Airflow so agents know what the data means, not just the schema. Cortex Sense enriches that context at runtime from query history and activity, and Snowflake claims it lifts agent accuracy on complex queries from 47% to 83%. The Natoma acquisition adds governed MCP access to more than 100 business systems without leaving the security perimeter. That is a structural problem for vendors whose entire product is a data catalog. If the context layer lives where the data and the agents live, a catalog that only mirrors that context is a feature, not a company. Atlan, for example, now calls itself a Context company, not a catalog. Horizon is not yet a business data catalog. At the pace Snowflake shipped this year, I expect it to get there within twelve months. I see Summit 2026 as Snowflake answering everyone who doubted it could do AI for the enterprise. The agentic platform is live, easy to use, and being adopted fast. The application platform is well on its way and already getting used by enterprises. And CoCo lets you build on both in a quarter of the time it used to take, maybe less. Unlock access to the largest independent learning library in Tech for FREE! If Snowflake Summit 2026 left one message behind, it is that Snowflake is no longer just a data warehouse. It is becoming a platform for governed data, AI, agents, and applications. For readers who want to go deeper into building on that platform, the upcoming Snowflake Cookbook, Second Edition from Packt offers practical recipes for designing governed, intelligent, AI-ready data platforms in the Snowflake AI Data Cloud. You can explore the book here: Author BioAugusto Rosa is a technology leader with 20+ years of experience building and scaling software, data, cloud, and security capabilities. He’s recognized in the Snowflake community as a Snowflake Data Superhero and Snowflake Subject Matter Expert, and he regularly shares practical patterns for modern data engineering and governance.Across consulting and product environments, Augusto has led teams delivering cloud platforms and data solutions across industries, including financial services, telecom, media, and technology. He contributes heavily to the community as a Toronto Snowflake User Group organizer and as a mentor with Rogers Cybersecure Catalyst at Toronto Metropolitan University, supporting cybersecurity and fintech startups in Canada.
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