Post Featured Image

AI Agents Will Break Any Rule You Don't Test

Most teams give their AI agents an AGENTS.md, a CLAUDE.md, or a Cursor rule full of polite architectural guidance. Layers, boundaries, where secrets live, what may import from what. Three weeks later the codebase is spaghetti reaching across every line they wrote down, and they wonder why the agent ignored them. Documents do not enforce architecture. Tests do. The fix is small, language-agnostic, and unforgiving: take your most important architecture rules, write them as a deterministic test, wire it into a pre-commit hook, and let CI run it again. Now the agent literally cannot finish the work if it breaks the architecture.

READ MORE

Post Featured Image

Pick a Lane: Factory or Frontier

A year ago I wrote that AI workers fall into four tiers (Conscript, Cyborg, Centaur, Centurion), stacked from least output per human to most. The tiers are still real. The implied ladder isn’t. The longer I work alongside agents and watch the people who do it well, the clearer it gets that there isn’t one destination at the top of the stack. Two lanes are opening up in front of every serious operator, and they reward completely different instincts. Pick the wrong one and you’ll either over-systemize a problem nobody has solved yet, or you’ll keep hand-crafting work the world has already turned into a commodity. Both mistakes are expensive. Only one is recoverable.

READ MORE

Post Featured Image

Operators Are the Missing Role in AI Agent Design

Everyone is racing to build autonomous agents. Almost nobody is designing the human role that keeps those agents from drifting, lying, or quietly burning money in a corner. That role has a name, and it is not Prompt Engineer. It is Operator: the dedicated, specially trained human who knows one specific agent the way a factory operator knows their line. It is the most underrated job in AI right now, and it decides whether your agents ship value or ship excuses.

READ MORE

Post Featured Image

Dark Factory: Man & Machine

2026 is the age of the software factory. Dark factories where agents run the line at 3am with no humans in the building. Light factories where humans and agents work side by side at the bench. Every ambitious company is racing to build one — and most of them are buying the same fantasy: that once the factory is built, the engineers go away. They won’t. The factory will eat the typist, but it will mint a new role nobody has staffed yet — the Operator.

READ MORE