Six New Tips for Better Coding with Agents — cover art: a warm Rackham-register watercolour of a small workshop table under a window, six oddly-shaped tools laid out in a row across the table — a tiny disposable rocket, a fountain pen, a paper crane, a stopwatch, a small open hand-mirror, and a single match — a slender wizardly figure (Steve-as-Rhialto, 2020s era, full white beard, deep cornflower-blue robe and hat) leaning over them and tightening a clamp on one with a calm grin.

2025 · Medium · Essay

“Software is now throwaway — expect < 1 year shelf life.”
— From Six New Tips for Better Coding With Agents, December 2025
Read the essay

© 2025 Steve Yegge. Originally published at Medium.

Author’s note

This post was for the true early adopters. While the industry was still arguing about whether agents are useful, I was introducing concepts like Agent UX (AX). The tips in this post are all still useful a year later: use Beads, do a ton more validation, focus on AX. It's a fast read, but useful.

AI Notes

A field report written from Sydney during a Commonwealth Bank of Australia workshop week with Gene Kim, December 2025. The frame: the Vibe Coding book closed in early 2025 and is still completely applicable, but a year of running the book's techniques in real engineering organisations has produced new themes that didn't make the print deadline. The post is a tour of six of them in no particular order, with the throwaway-software observation at the top because it is the one that reorganises every other piece of advice underneath it — Anthropic is already moving this way internally, and the rest of the industry will follow whether it wants to or not.

Read it after the Vibe Coding book, not instead of it.

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