Now that the models are powerful and the agents are capable, why are we still approaching software development as if it's the same activity that it used to be, but "faster"? GitHub Next thinks about what this future wants to be through two lenses: - Automation: intelligence allows us to automate much more than we could with heuristics alone. How should that automation work? What guardrails do we have to put in place so that our CISOs allow us to do that? - Collaboration: agents can understand anything in your codebase, but what about all the facts that are in the heads of your teammates? Whether it's corporate politics or taste, how do we get the humans to leak that context where agents can see it and use it to produce better outcomes? Realtime multiplayer tools have displaced every turn-based tool out there. What should that look like for code? It's not going to be as simple as multiple cursors. Come by to hear more about what GitHub Next is learning about the changing shape of software creation — one that allows us to build better, not merely faster. One that allows us to scale up teams, not only individuals. And one where automations buy us time for craft and polish, not slop. We were promised flying cars, instead we have fifteen terminals. Let's have a nicer future than that.
Agentic Engineering sessions at AI Engineer World's Fair 2026 in San Francisco.
Thursday, July 2, 2026
2:50 PM - 3:10 PM·20m
Track 8 · Room 2020
Capacity: 250 attendees
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Idan Gazit
Head of GitHub Next
GitHub
Idan Gazit leads GitHub Next, the birthplace of GitHub Copilot, and many more prototypes that explore how AI will make software development faster, easier, safer, and more accessible for developers everywhere. As a hybrid designer and developer, his interests span a variety of fields. Idan is keenly interested in data display issues, typography, and color. You're likely to hear him talk about the pit of success, and the importance of good nouns. Idan was previously a principal engineer at Heroku, and is an alumnus of the Django web framework's core development team. He is a firm believer in the power of web technologies, and is most at home in them, though many evenings you can find him soldering a new keyboard or muttering foul language while trying to get Rust to run on a microcontroller.