On Monday, December 8, Fetch.ai and Google Cloud hosted the Agentic Interop Summit at the Google campus in Mountain View, bringing together developers, enterprises, and AI enthusiasts to explore the next frontier of the agentic economy. The event highlighted how Gemini-driven agents, agent-to-agent (A2A) interoperability, and enterprise-grade capabilities are enabling builders to deploy real workflows at scale.
The evening opened with a keynote from Jeremiah Owyang, who explored the rise of AI-first culture and the emerging role of autonomous agents in orchestrating complex systems across software and robotics.
During a fireside chat, Humayun Sheikh, CEO and Founder of Fetch.ai, joined by Samuel J. Cummings III, Director of Education at Genai.works, discussed the three major barriers to agent adoption:
They emphasized why agents must have verifiable identity, seamless communication, and the ability to transact. This foundational infrastructure is essential for scaling a reliable and accessible agent ecosystem.
Peter Danenberg from Google DeepMind presented Gemini 3 agentic capabilities, demonstrating how coordinating agents across frameworks and systems is the next frontier in AI. This was followed by a session on search and discovery of agents via Gemini 3 in Agentverse, showing how intent-driven agent interactions can unlock practical, real-world workflows.
Demonstrated by Jordan Ellis and Attila Bagoly, Chief AI Officer at Fetch.ai.
Where agents autonomously negotiated schedules, selected a restaurant, and completed a paid dinner reservation via OpenTable and Visa Intelligent Commerce. Presented by Craig DeWitt of Skyfire.
A network of 29 collaborating agents generated a short film from a single natural language prompt in under five minutes—showcasing seamless orchestration with no human intervention.
“What made the Agentic Interop Summit powerful was seeing agentic AI move from theory to execution,” — Sana Wajid, Chief Development Officer at Fetch.ai. “From interoperable agents to real-world payments and orchestration, this was about proving that agents can already operate across systems, enterprises, and workflows in a way that’s scalable and trustworthy.”
Attendees left inspired by a vision of a future where autonomous agents handle tasks that were once impossible—reshaping how we work, coordinate, and create.