Someone finally named the thing. There’s a word now for the work I’ve been doing for the last two years without a vocabulary for it. The middle loop. Supervisory engineering. The thing that sits between writing code and shipping it. The thing that didn’t exist before agents started producing code faster than any human could…
Month: April 2026
Everyone Is an “Engineer” Now, and Nobody Knows What Anyone Does
A CTO’s field guide to the 2026 AI job title theater, with a companion reference guide covering all 40 roles. I have been a CTO for most of my adult life. I have hired, fired, onboarded, mentored, and occasionally been forced to explain to finance why a “Senior Applied Generative AI Engineer II” and a…
The Engineering Age That’s Ending, and the One We Haven’t Named Yet
The best engineers I know write less code than they did two years ago. They ship more. Everyone wants the clean story. AI replaces developers. AI makes developers 10x. Juniors are cooked. Juniors are saved. Pick a side. The reality is messier. Big Tech new grad hires dropped to 7% of all new hires, down…
Open Source Security Is Everyone’s Problem Now
Two weeks ago, a North Korean state actor compromised the lead maintainer of Axios and published malicious versions to npm. The library has roughly 100 million weekly downloads. The poisoned packages were live for about three hours before anyone noticed. Three hours. That is all it took to potentially compromise tens of thousands of development…
Vibing Fatigue: Why Tracking AI Usage Is the Wrong KPI
A developer I know got pulled into a “productivity review” last month. Not because their output dropped. Because their AI tool usage was below the team average. Their manager wanted to know why they weren’t using AI for coding enough. Not why their code had fewer bugs. Not why their PRs moved through review faster….