Agents of Dev - AI, Agent & Agentic Development cover art

Agents of Dev - AI, Agent & Agentic Development

Agents of Dev - AI, Agent & Agentic Development

By: The Futurum Group
Listen for free

About this listen

The Agents of Dev Podcast explores how software developers build and will build applications in the era of AI, agents, and agentic technologies. Futurum Research analysts Mitch Ashley and Brad Shimmin bring their dual perspectives as industry analysts and practitioners to unpack what industry moves, vendor strategies, and on-the-ground engineering realities signal about the future of enterprise software. Each episode explores innovations, opportunities, and even oopsies to inform us about how AI-native development is reshaping the work of planning, designing, building, deploying, and operating software. Part of the Futurum Group family of podcasts.

Copyright 2025-2026 All rights reserved.
Politics & Government
Episodes
  • AI Boom Rewrites Dev Roles: Snowflake SnowWork & NVIDIA Open-Source Rise | Agents of Dev
    Apr 3 2026

    AI is rewriting every tech role, and the pace of change is accelerating faster than most organizations and professionals expected.

    In this episode of Agents of Dev, Mitch Ashley and Brad Shimmin break down how the AI boom and the rise of agentic software development are reshaping career paths, team structures, and the very definition of what it means to be a software developer in real time.

    They unpack the latest news on Snowflake’s SnowWork and NVIDIA’s open-source AI initiatives, spotlight the tools and frameworks accelerating AI adoption, and chart what all of this means for the future of software engineering.

    #AgentsofDev #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #SoftwareDevelopment #AgenticAI #AIDevelopment #DevOps #CloudComputing #MachineLearning

    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • The Recursive Revolution: How Agentic AI is Rewriting the Rules of Code | Agents of Dev
    Mar 26 2026

    Imagine a world where your software doesn’t just run—it thinks, adapts, and heals itself when a data pipeline breaks at 3:00 AM.

    In this episode of Agents of Dev, Mitch Ashley and Brad Shimmin explore the “Inception” of modern coding: the rise of self-referential, agentic software.

    Moving beyond functions calling functions, they dive into systems that can act, correct, and even evolve on their own. As traditional CSV-and-FTP workflows buckle under modern data demands, autonomous systems are stepping in. From self-correcting AI to the conversational capabilities of Snowflake’s Snow Work, developers are shifting from manual mechanics to architects of intelligent, adaptive systems.

    With software becoming increasingly autonomous, the role of the developer is evolving—becoming more creative, strategic, and powerful. The future of code isn’t just written anymore; it’s engineered to learn.

    #AgentsofDev #SoftwareDevelopment #AIAgents #AgenticWorkflows #TechTrends #Snowflake #DevOps #Programming #ArtificialIntelligence #DataIntegration

    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • Teradata’s AI Shift, PromptFu Rumors & the Rise of Verification Debt
    Mar 19 2026

    In this episode of Agents of Dev, Mitch Ashley and Brad Shimmin explore how Teradata is evolving into an open data platform designed for AI, hybrid search and agentic workflows.

    They also examine the growing importance of AI security, including what OpenAI’s potential PromptFu acquisition could signal for the future of securing AI-generated software.

    The conversation breaks down the rise of verification debt in AI-generated code, why software teams are changing applications more frequently than ever, and how AI is helping developers manage an overwhelming volume of technical information.

    This episode connects the dots between open data platforms, AI agents, software quality, security and observability — and what it all means for the future of software development.

    #AgentsOfDev #Teradata #AI #AIAgents #AISecurity #PromptFu #SoftwareDevelopment #VerificationDebt #DataPlatform

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
No reviews yet