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DevCon 2025
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| With Chris Messina (Product Leader, Thoughtworks), Josh Long (Dev Advocate, AWS), Liran Tal (Dir., Broadcom), Ray Myers (Chief Architect, Netlify), Guy Podjarny (Founder, Independent), Neal Ford (S/w Architect, Snyk), Sean Roberts (Principal Enggr, Qodo AI), Macey Baker (Community Enggr, Tessl). |
| Industry City, 220 36th St, Ste 2A, Brooklyn |
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Nov 18 (Tue) , 2025 @ 07:00 AM
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FREE |
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| DETAILS |
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The world's largest conference for spec-centric, AI-native software development.
Swap ideas with other devs building with AI, meet the open-source maintainers you follow, & make connections you'll actually keep.
Featured
09:20
30m
Main Stage - 52A
talk
Edge
Spec Driven Dev - From Single Player to Multiplayer to Ecosystem
Specs help a human developer drive an agent's behavior. They let you define development practices, inject missing knowledge & capture long term product definitions. This works great for a single developer, but how does it work for a team? How do you collaborate on product specs & the code they generate? How do you produce & distribute corporate knowledge? Going further, what does collaboration across an ecosystem look like? In this talk, Guy will explore the present & future of Spec Driven Development, exploring how the forming practices expand & scale to have teams, organizations & the entire ecosystem build together.
Guy Podjarny
11:10
25m
Main Stage - 52A
talk
Now
Managing fleets of coding agents with OpenHands
We'll use OpenHands--an MIT-licensed agent orchestration platform--to drive a fleet of coding agents on a large real-world task. OpenHands can be used as a CLI or on the web, & agents can run on your workstation or in the cloud. We'll learn how to get more work done in parallel by leveraging cloud-based, asynchronous agents instead of running directly on our own workstations. We'll use OpenHands to monitor agents & drive them forward to build a large codebase from scratch.
Robert Brennan
16:30
25m
Main Stage - 52A
talk
Edge
AXDX: High voltage dev workflows
Developer Experience (DX) has always been about clarity, speed, & keeping engineers productive. Developers these days are increasingly delegating to AI agents who write, test, & deploy on their behalf. For some, they delegate very little; for others they delegate a lot. That's where applying skills in Agent Experience (AX) becomes critical. If you want strong DX going forward, you can't ignore AX. The experience you design for agents directly shapes the effectiveness of the developers they support. This talk will explore how to shift from the practices that made DX successful in the past to the new requirements of agent-driven workflows. We'll cover: Who you're really serving when building tools in an era of AI delegation. Why prioritizing AX ensures your DX remains resilient & future-proof. How to measure & improve your repo/system AX with practical techniques like context tools, shared systems for teams, & measuring AX efficacy. The takeaway: to keep DX strong, you have to focus on AX. It's not a question of supporting AI or agents in general, it's a question of supporting the developers that use them.
Sean Roberts
Day 1: Workshops
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