"What is Correct?" and is that even the right question any more? - Christopher Neugebauer - 2026
https://pretalx.northbaypython.org/nb... For the first time in the history of computer science, actual practicioners of software engineering appear to be having a serious go at using automated code generation tools to produce entire programs. The industry has not yet agreed that this is an unqualified disaster. On the other hand, we have known for quite a long time that there are a number of things that computers cannot do: not things that are merely difficult to solve, but things that are actually impossible. One particularly salient example is asking a computer program to figure out what a (possibly different) computer program even does. This raises a number of fascinating questions about the act of asking computers to write our code for us, and the roles of us as software engineers, now, and in the not-too-distant future. We're going to focus on the act of specifying a problem, and verifying whether whether our solution to a problem meets that specification. How do we judge whether something is "correct"? How much of a problem can we ask a computer to solve? Is there still a place for not doing everything completely automatically? This talk combines observations from foundational computer science, from the emergence of automated software testing, and some recent observations about the performance of recent-generation LLMs acting autonomously. We will raise some questions. We might answer 1-2 of them.

"Python In The Small" - Glyph (Nbpy2025)

Software engineering at the tipping point

Is this the only skill left?

Nobody Breaks Celebrities Like Rowan Atkinson

Mike Huls - Python under the hood: why Python is so slow and how to speed it up

State of Exception(s) - Benno Rice - 2026

Software jobs in 2026...

Inside Anthropic, the $965 Billion AI Juggernaut | The Circuit

An Economy of Empathy - Mario Munoz - 2026

Designing Python APIs for Data You Don’t Control - Saurav Jain - 2026

"Variables and objects: it's pointers all the way down" - Trey Hunner (Nbpy2025)

Andrej Karpathy: From Vibe Coding to Agentic Engineering w/ Stephanie Zhan

AI buys robot and car, does exactly what experts warned.

The Only Unbreakable Law

"Software Fundamentals Matter More Than Ever" — Matt Pocock

The AI Take Over Has Completely Backfired and I Can't Be Happier

Anonymous Functions (and Other Ways to Annoy Your Coworkers) - Joe Kaufeld - 2026

What 6 months of AI coding did to my dev team

Co-Creator of Haskell: Useless vs Useful Languages, Rust vs C, Functional Programming | Simon Jones

