Operant AI announced the launch of MCP Gateway, an expansion of its flagship AI Gatekeeper™ platform, that delivers comprehensive security for Model Context Protocol (MCP) applications.
In March, Anthropic's CEO predicted that GenAI will write 90% of software code within the next three to six months. While the timeline is ambitious, the reality is most AI-generated code is unusable without significant human oversight.
GenAI excels at handling repetitive coding tasks, but it still relies on developers to guide the work through smart prompting, critical judgment and contextual oversight to ensure outputs meet real-world needs. In fact, even top-performing large language models (LLMs) like Claude 3.5 could only solve fewer than half of real-world engineering tasks.
This evolution makes human expertise more important than ever. It's a call to rethink the role of developers — not in terms of what the industry is giving up to AI, but what the industry can gain by working alongside it. By embracing this new dynamic, technologists worldwide can harness GenAI to drive better outcomes and future-proof their careers.
The Real Role of AI in Today's Development Workflows
GenAI is already reshaping the development process, but not in the way some headlines suggest. The reality is far more nuanced.
AI has become a powerful tool for generating common, repeatable patterns — the kind of scaffolding and boilerplate that once consumed hours of developer time. With a single prompt, GenAI can spin up UI templates or write CRUD operations. But its capabilities taper off in more complex layers of the stack, such as middleware, data systems and security configuration — areas that require nuance, complex reasoning and multi-step workflows.
When tasked with layered decision-making, LLMs are more prone to generating inaccurate results. Some models have shown hallucination rates as high as 79% in benchmark tests, making it clear that AI-generated code can't be trusted at face value.
Human oversight becomes even more important with the rise of agentic AI. While the increased autonomy of these systems allows them to perform full workflows, it also increases the surface area for failures and hallucinations.
As AI systems take on more responsibilities in the dev process, the role of a developer also expands. It no longer just involves writing code, but reviewing it, integrating it into complex systems and ensuring it meets quality, security and business requirements, too. That's why now is the time to evolve mindsets and skillsets.
How Developers Can Future-Proof Their Careers as AI Transforms Software Development
Similar to the way infrastructure engineers grew into DevOps and platform engineers, today's software engineers are evolving into technologists — validating code from top to bottom, safeguarding against hallucinations, reviewing system interactions, enforcing security standards and ensuring every output aligns with business and technical goals.
To thrive in this new era, developers must embrace new opportunities and sharpen the skills needed to collaborate with GenAI.
1. Take ownership of AI-generated code
GenAI can create large portions of application code, but much of it falls short of being production-ready, especially in systems that handle sensitive data or face regulatory scrutiny.
To ensure viability of AI-generated code, it has to be reviewed, tested, debugged and secured before it goes live. That means more than just verifying that the code "runs." It's about ensuring implementation aligns with the system's architecture, business goals and compliance requirements.
That's why many teams are starting to ground AI systems in curated, trustworthy data sources — limiting their knowledge base to vetted documentation, architectural standards or internal style guides rather than relying on unpredictable data from the open web.
Guiding AI to work only from approved sources is quickly becoming a key differentiator for developers, reducing the risk of hallucinated or outdated code and ensuring outputs align with real-world constraints and standards.
Effective oversight also requires fluency in modern programming languages, cloud environments and development workflows. Tools like automated testing can help catch errors early in the pipeline, but it ultimately requires human input to identify hallucinations, close security gaps and validate for quality and reliability within the broader ecosystem.
2. Hone prompt engineering skills
As AI agents grow more capable, interactions with them will begin to resemble real collaboration. That's why prompt engineering is quickly emerging as a foundational skill for developers — one that bridges intent with the AI system's output.
Whether asking AI to "write a Python script that pulls data from an external API" or "generate a secure, scalable API endpoint in Node.js for handling user authentication," how the prompt is framed directly impacts the quality and usability of the response.
Effective prompting requires a clear understanding of the task at hand, the model's limitations and the technical context (e.g., target framework, programming language or relevant dependencies). Start building the necessary skills by experimenting with different styles of prompting, being specific about constraints and learning to identify where the model misinterprets intent, applies the wrong patterns or outputs faulty logic.
Since prompting is rarely a one-and-done process, approach it as one would with their own code: Refine inputs, clarify intent and iterate until the output meets the goals.
3. Lean into creativity and problem solving
As GenAI takes over routine, pattern-based tasks, a developer's value shifts to the kinds of work machines can't easily replicate, like translating vague stakeholder goals into actionable product requirements, designing for edge cases and weighing trade-offs between user experience and system performance.
These responsibilities require a level of abstraction, business context and judgment that only humans can provide. That's where an expert's product thinking becomes a superpower.
By zooming out to understand long-term business goals, identifying opportunities for innovation and making architectural decisions that balance trade-offs, technologists bring critical value to the table. AI draws from what's already been done. The human advantage lies in the ability to chart paths that don't yet exist in the data.
The Future Belongs to Technologists Who Embrace AI
The shift toward AI-assisted development isn't about developers losing relevance — it's about gaining new leverage.
By embracing AI as a strategic partner, technologists can move faster, build smarter and help shape the next generation of software. Human expertise plays an irreplaceable role in ensuring what's built is not only functional, but also trustworthy, secure and aligned with real-world goals and needs.
As agentic AI becomes more prevalent, the most in-demand technologists will be the ones who can guide, govern and refine AI-generated outcomes.
So while AI might change how humans work, it's human judgement, creativity and insight that will define what gets built next.
Industry News
Oracle has expanded its collaboration with NVIDIA to help customers streamline the development and deployment of production-ready AI, develop and run next-generation reasoning models and AI agents, and access the computing resources needed to further accelerate AI innovation.
Datadog launched its Internal Developer Portal (IDP) built on live observability data.
Azul and Chainguard announced a strategic partnership that will unite Azul’s commercial support and curated OpenJDK distributions with Chainguard’s Linux distro, software factory and container images.
SmartBear launched Reflect Mobile featuring HaloAI, expanding its no-code, GenAI-powered test automation platform to include native mobile apps.
ArmorCode announced the launch of AI Code Insights.
Codiac announced the release of Codiac 2.5, a major update to its unified automation platform for container orchestration and Kubernetes management.
Harness Internal Developer Portal (IDP) is releasing major upgrades and new features built to address challenges developers face daily, ultimately giving them more time back for innovation.
Azul announced an enhancement to Azul Intelligence Cloud, a breakthrough capability in Azul Vulnerability Detection that brings precision to detection of Java application security vulnerabilities.
ZEST Security announced its strategic integration with Upwind, giving DevOps and Security teams real-time, runtime powered cloud visibility combined with intelligent, Agentic AI-driven remediation.
Google announced an upgraded preview of Gemini 2.5 Pro, its most intelligent model yet.
iTmethods and Coder have partnered to bring enterprises a new way to deploy secure, high-performance and AI-ready Cloud Development Environments (CDEs).
Gearset announced the expansion of its new Observability functionality to include Flow and Apex error monitoring.
Check Point® Software Technologies Ltd. announced that U.S. News & World Report has named the company among its 2025-2026 list of Best Companies to Work For.
Postman announced new capabilities that make it dramatically easier to design, test, deploy, and monitor AI agents and the APIs they rely on.