How to Streamline Your Development Workflow with GitHub Copilot's New Desktop App

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Introduction

GitHub has reimagined its Copilot coding assistant by releasing a standalone desktop application that centralizes agent management, issue tracking, pull request handling, and development sessions into one interface. This guide walks you through accessing, installing, and maximizing the new GitHub Copilot app—whether you're a seasoned user or exploring autonomous coding agents for the first time. By the end, you'll know how to launch tasks directly from GitHub issues, run multiple coding agents simultaneously, and review changes without juggling terminals, editors, and browser tabs.

How to Streamline Your Development Workflow with GitHub Copilot's New Desktop App
Source: thenewstack.io

What You Need

Step-by-Step Guide

Step 1: Obtain Access to the GitHub Copilot App

Before you can use the desktop app, confirm your eligibility:

Tip: Keep an eye on the launch date hinted at June 2 in official materials; a wider rollout may remove waitlists.

Step 2: Download and Install the Desktop Application

Once access is granted, install the app:

  1. Go to the GitHub Copilot app download page.
  2. Select your operating system (macOS, Windows, or Linux) and download the installer.
  3. Run the installer and follow the on-screen prompts. On macOS, drag the app to the Applications folder; on Windows, run the executable; on Linux, use the provided package file (e.g., .deb or .rpm).
  4. Launch the app after installation.

Step 3: Sign In and Configure Your Environment

When you first open the app:

  1. Click Sign in with GitHub and authorize the app to access your repositories, issues, and pull requests.
  2. Select the repositories you want to manage through the app. You can change this later in settings.
  3. Optionally, connect your preferred code editor (VS Code, JetBrains, etc.) for direct file editing from the app.
  4. Review the unified inbox—the app will surface recent issues and PRs automatically.

The interface resembles a project hub with three main panels: a left sidebar for navigation, a center workspace for active sessions, and a right panel for progress logs.

Step 4: Launch Agents from Issues, Prompts, or Existing Sessions

The core functionality is initiating Copilot agents to automate coding tasks. Here's how:

Each agent runs independently, allowing you to delegate multiple tasks concurrently.

Step 5: Monitor and Manage Multiple Agents

While agents work, you can supervise them:

How to Streamline Your Development Workflow with GitHub Copilot's New Desktop App
Source: thenewstack.io
  1. View all active agents in the Sessions pane (left sidebar). Each shows a status (running, paused, completed).
  2. Click an agent to see its real-time logs—file changes, test outputs, and reasoning traces.
  3. Pause an agent if you need to review partial changes before proceeding.
  4. Resume paused sessions at any time; the agent picks up where it left off.

The app also shows repository context—which files are affected, so you can avoid conflicts between concurrent agents.

Step 6: Review and Integrate Changes

Once an agent finishes:

You can also resume a completed session later to add more work without starting over.

Step 7: Use the Unified Inbox for Ongoing Project Management

Keep your workflow continuous:

This inbox eliminates the need to switch between GitHub.com, your terminal, and your editor for everyday tasks.

Tips for Getting the Most Out of the GitHub Copilot App

By following these steps, you’ll transform Copilot from a simple editor plugin into an autonomous coding teammate—all within a single, dedicated desktop experience.

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