The most consequential changes in a technical field rarely arrive as breakthroughs. They arrive as tooling updates, the moment when something that required a specialist starts requiring only a description. That's the pattern this week, across VR development, computer vision pipelines, and AI-assisted data labelling simultaneously. Meta shipped a meaningful update to its Immersive Web SDK (IWSDK), the open-source framework for building VR experiences that run inside a browser via WebXR, a standard that lets web pages request access to VR hardware without a native app install. The new piece is an agentic workflow layer: AI coding assistants can now generate WebXR scene logic from natural-language descriptions, collapsing the distance between "I want an experience where X happens" and a working prototype. I suspect this will push WebXR from a demo format into something closer to a shipping channel for lightweight enterprise and clinical applications over the next 12–18 months.…