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Engineers Find Supervising AI Coding Agents Surprisingly Time-Consuming

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Leo Boytsov@srchvrs#590inTech

🧵"As agentic engineering has become the norm, engineers are discovering that supervising coding agents is surprisingly time consuming. "↩️

9:05 AM · Jun 11, 2026 · 186 Views
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Users express optimism that supervising AI coding agents will sustain or increase demand for software engineers rather than eliminate their roles.

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Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

"More quantitative evidence comes from SWE-chat, a dataset of coding agent interactions from open-source developers who opted into a logging tool. The study found that only 44% of agent-produced code survives into user commits, that vibe-coded commits introduce vulnerabilities at nine times the human-only rate, and that the most common user intent is understanding existing code, not generating new code (19% vs 13%)." ↩️

Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

🧵"As agentic engineering has become the norm, engineers are discovering that supervising coding agents is surprisingly time consuming. "↩️

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Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

"The self-selected nature of the dataset means that we can’t draw strong conclusions based on this study alone, but it does reinforce many other lines of evidence that vibe-coding and agentic engineering patterns are quite different. " ↩️

Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

"More quantitative evidence comes from SWE-chat, a dataset of coding agent interactions from open-source developers who opted into a logging tool. The study found that only 44% of agent-produced code survives into user commits, that vibe-coded commits introduce vulnerabilities at nine times the human-only rate, and that the most common user intent is understanding existing code, not generating new code (19% vs 13%)." ↩️

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Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

Historically, this has been the pattern — programmer employment in the U.S. has grown from near-zero around 1950 to millions today. This is sharply different from occupations such as agriculture in which labor demand was famously decimated due to mechanization and automation. ↩️

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Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

In fact, not only are software engineering jobs not going away due to AI, there might even be an increase in demand for software engineers. When software (or anything else) gets cheaper to create due to technological productivity improvements, people will buy a lot more software (in econ jargon, software is highly “price elastic”). ↩️

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Leo Boytsov@srchvrs

The difference is that the amount of calories people consume is relatively fixed — even a 25% increase led to the obesity epidemic — whereas the amount of software produced has grown a millionfold. Modern cars have something like a hundred million lines of code running on their various on-board computer 🟦 https://www.normaltech.ai/p/why-ai-hasnt-replaced-software-engineers

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