Jforum #127
Agentic Engineering
We invite you to a Jforum meetup hosted at Omegapoint.
Agenda:
17:30 Doors open, light food and drinks
18:00 Will Agentic Coding Make Us Dream of Electric Sheep? by Sebastian Ware
LLMs had a major breakthrough in the autumn of 2025 when code generation capabilities suddenly allowed the creation of complex software applications with limited or no human review or correction. This has on one hand been hailed as a coding revolution and on the other hand criticised as another step in the enshittification of software development. Applications such as OpenClaw and Moltbook proved both points. Vibe coding has become a magic wand for low effort builders who are in the business of selling dreams, but agentic coding isn't just for fairytales and pixie dust.
I have spent all my working hours since the release of Opus 4.5 exploring human-in-the-loop agentic coding by building tools* to assist with real world software development tasks. I have used these tools to maintain existing code bases, build server infrastructure, created desktop GUI-applications and shipped code to half a million users.
This talk will explore enshittification, safety and developer happiness: the transformation from software developer to software builder; how following a PITA**-loop improves outcomes in a major way; and why a team of five replacing a department of 50 should be about reducing friction, not downsizing.
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* Tools combining context engineering (Anthropic), (context augmented) automatic prompt engineer (APE), Just-in-Time Retrieval and RAG
** Plan, Implement, Test, Analyse (PITA)
NOTE: electric sheep in this context refers to cheap, low quality software that mimic the real thing.
19:00 AI that builds(?) systems by Simon Velander
In the future, AI will build our IT systems! It is an increasingly common observation, but at the same time many solutions seem to be replaced by AI rather than built by it. In this talk we dive deeper into this question. We invent a completely neural full-stack solution and invite you to reflect on the hypothesis that traditional software will not eat so much of the world?
20:00 For those who wants to keep going, follow us to a pub nearby for a last beer.