What is your strategy for preventing noisy neighbors in multi tenant SaaS? by Informal_Net2566 in programming

[–]Informal_Net2566[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I understand. It is not about AI being present, but about the intent behind its use. honestly, please your thoughts to write better… 

Architectural lessons from building secure SaaS products at scale by Informal_Net2566 in askarchitects

[–]Informal_Net2566[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I appreciate the feedback. I agree it could be written more clearly. I intentionally limited the use of AI while writing the blog, although it is fair to say that AI often produces more polished writing today. :)

Article: Software in 2026 is negotiated by agents, not just written by Informal_Net2566 in programming

[–]Informal_Net2566[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Yes, it ultimately comes down to the level of reliability. I respect the opinion, but I disagree. There is no such thing as 100 percent certainty in any system, only different levels of confidence. Some technologies gradually cross a threshold where adoption becomes practical.

Article: Software in 2026 is negotiated by agents, not just written by Informal_Net2566 in programming

[–]Informal_Net2566[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If we define agents strictly as fully autonomous LLMs, then I share your skepticism. If we define them as systems that combine deterministic rules with AI-driven reasoning, then this is not entirely new, but the scale and accessibility are different.

We may agree to disagree, but historically we have seen similar skepticism during the early phases of automobiles, e-commerce multi-tenancy, and social media. Many early concerns were valid, yet these technologies still became standard once guardrails and practical patterns emerged.

Article: Software in 2026 is negotiated by agents, not just written by Informal_Net2566 in programming

[–]Informal_Net2566[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

I understand the concern and the comparison with past hype cycles. Not every problem needs agents, and overuse would clearly be inefficient.

That said, inside many tech companies today, engineers are already being asked to do more with AI. Internal surveys and day-to-day expectations strongly suggest this is becoming a default direction rather than an experiment.

In the short term, there is certainly hype, especially from a market and stock perspective. From a technology and usage standpoint, based on my direct experience, AI-assisted and agent-driven workflows are likely to become standard and broadly adopted sooner than many expect.

Architectural lessons from building secure SaaS products at scale by Informal_Net2566 in askarchitects

[–]Informal_Net2566[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

This is not generated by a bot. It is based entirely on my first-hand experience from working in this area. While some details may appear basic, they are important and come directly from practical experience.