Big Tech is teaming up with the Linux Foundation to bring some much-needed order to the chaotic world of AI agents through the Autonomous Agents Interoperability Framework (AAIF), aiming to standardize protocols like the Model Context Protocol (MCP) and OpenAI’s AGENTS.md so these tools play nice across systems. MCP, built on Block’s open-source Goose agent, lets you customize AI for coding tasks that run locally or in the cloud with any large language model, which is a solid win for SMBs looking to ditch proprietary lock-in without breaking the bank. Meanwhile, AGENTS.md is OpenAI’s fresh take on a markdown guide that keeps AI behaviors predictable—think of it as a digital rulebook to avoid your agents going rogue on you. This rush to standardize feels like a knee-jerk reaction to the AI gold rush, where no one’s quite sure what’s a flash in the pan and what’s here to stay, but it’s a smart move that could save MSPs time and headaches by fostering interoperability. Ultimately, with heavyweights like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft backing the effort, the Linux Foundation might just turn this into a reliable ecosystem, helping tech-curious pros and small-business owners integrate AI without getting lost in the hype.