Andrej Karpathy on X: "A lot of people quote tweeted this as 1 year anniversary of vibe coding. Some retrospective - I've had a Twitter account for 17 years now (omg) and I still can't predict my tweet engagement basically at all. This was a shower of thoughts throwaway tweet that I just fired off"
Quick Answer
Andrej Karpathy reflects on the first anniversary of 'vibe coding,' noting its evolution from fun projects to a professional standard with LLM agents.
Quick Take
Andrej Karpathy reflects on the first anniversary of 'vibe coding,' noting its evolution from fun projects to a professional standard with LLM agents. He emphasizes the shift towards 'agentic engineering,' where oversight is key, and anticipates further advancements in AI programming tools by 2026.
Key Points
- Karpathy's tweet on vibe coding became a significant cultural reference in tech.
- Vibe coding was initially used for low-stakes projects, now evolving into professional workflows.
- The term 'agentic engineering' reflects the new norm of overseeing LLM agents in coding.
- Future advancements in AI programming tools are expected by 2026.
- Karpathy has been on Twitter for 17 years, still struggling to predict engagement.
📖 Reader Mode
~2 min readA lot of people quote tweeted this as 1 year anniversary of vibe coding. Some retrospective - I've had a Twitter account for 17 years now (omg) and I still can't predict my tweet engagement basically at all. This was a shower of thoughts throwaway tweet that I just fired off without thinking but somehow it minted a fitting name at the right moment for something that a lot of people were feeling at the same time, so here we are: vibe coding is now mentioned on my Wikipedia as a major memetic "contribution" and even its article is longer. lol The one thing I'd add is that at the time, LLM capability was low enough that you'd mostly use vibe coding for fun throwaway projects, demos and explorations. It was good fun and it almost worked. Today (1 year later), programming via LLM agents is increasingly becoming a default workflow for professionals, except with more oversight and scrutiny. The goal is to claim the leverage from the use of agents but without any compromise on the quality of the software. Many people have tried to come up with a better name for this to differentiate it from vibe coding, personally my current favorite "agentic engineering": - "agentic" because the new default is that you are not writing the code directly 99% of the time, you are orchestrating agents who do and acting as oversight. - "engineering" to emphasize that there is an art & science and expertise to it. It's something you can learn and become better at, with its own depth of a different kind. In 2026, we're likely to see continued improvements on both the model layer and the new agent layer. I feel excited about the product of the two and another year of progress.
— Originally published at x.com
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