CtrlK
BlogDocsLog inGet started
Tessl Logo

ainativedev/latest-aidevcon-speakers-london-2026

AI Native DevCon 2026 London — all conference sessions as interactive skills

71

Quality

89%

Does it follow best practices?

Impact

No eval scenarios have been run

SecuritybySnyk

Risky

Do not use without reviewing

Overview
Quality
Evals
Security
Files

SKILL.mdtalk-lawson-agent-experience/

name:
talk-lawson-agent-experience
description:
Use when the user asks about Dana Lawson's talk "Built for Humans. Now Agents Are Here." (Netlify CTO, 2026) — including questions about Agent Experience (AX), the AX paradox, redesigning CLIs/build logs/deploy previews for agents, moving from APIs to capabilities, event-driven agent architectures, blueprints (skills/recipes/context/ADRs), software factories, autonomous development loops, sandbox + human-in-loop + audit/rollback trust principles, the expanded "builder persona," or applying Netlify's AX approach to the user's own platform.
metadata:
{"generated-by":"talk-to-skill","source":"user-pasted-transcript","generated-at":"2026-06-01"}

Built for Humans. Now Agents Are Here. — Dana Lawson (Netlify CTO)

Netlify was designed assuming a human was paying attention at every step — pushing code, reading logs, eyeballing deploy previews. When agents started driving the platform, every human assumption baked into the CLI, APIs, build logs, and branch workflow became friction. Lawson's thesis: redesigning surfaces, signals, and feedback loops for agents ("Agent Experience" / AX) didn't trade off against developer experience — it made the platform better for everyone, because code is no longer scarce; taste and judgment are.

Grounding rules — MUST follow when answering

  1. Before answering any specific question, read outline.md to locate the relevant section, then read that section of transcript.md.
  2. When attributing words, quote verbatim from transcript.md. Never put quotation marks around paraphrased content.
  3. If a claim isn't in transcript.md, say "the talk doesn't address this" — do not infer positions from outside knowledge.
  4. Cite by transcript line range whenever possible.
  5. Speaker attribution is unreliable for this transcript — the source has no per-speaker labels and contains speech-to-text artifacts (e.g. "Dan Austin" almost certainly = "Dana"; "Jeremiah leafed Spotify" appears to be a garble; "Matt Biemann" may be garbled). Prefer phrasing like "Lawson said..." when content is clearly the speaker, and "an audience member asked..." for Q&A. Do not invent attributions for the brief MC intro/outro.
  6. Cross-reference any named addressee with the participants list in outline.md before attributing.

How to help with this talk

Apply the speaker's approach to current work

When the user asks "how would Lawson tackle ?" or wants the talk's framework applied to their own situation:

  1. Use outline.md → "Named frameworks / concepts" to find the relevant framework (AX paradox, three architectural shifts, three trust principles, etc.).
  2. Read the corresponding range of transcript.md for the speaker's exact wording.
  3. Anchor your suggestion in a verbatim quote of how Lawson articulates the framework. Then walk through applying it step-by-step to the user's case.
  4. If the framework genuinely doesn't fit the user's situation, say so. Do not stretch the speaker's words to cover cases they don't actually address.

Audit the user's situation against the speaker's framework

When the user asks to "audit", "score", "review", "grade", "check", or "gap-analyse" their platform against Lawson's AX framework — or describes their setup and asks where they're falling short:

  1. Use outline.md → "Named frameworks / concepts" to locate Lawson's dimensions: the three architectural shifts (APIs→capabilities, request/response→event-driven, legible-to-agents) and the three trust principles (sandbox execution, human-in-loop by default, audit + rollback), plus the surface-level checklist (structured machine-readable errors, deploy preview signals, CLI redesigned away from y/n prompts).
  2. For each dimension, read Lawson's definition in transcript.md and quote it verbatim when stating what "good" looks like.
  3. Walk the user through every dimension in order. If the user hasn't described their state for a dimension, ask before scoring.
  4. For each, give a clear verdict (covered / partial / missing) grounded in Lawson's criteria, not your own intuition.
  5. If a dimension genuinely doesn't apply, say so explicitly.
  6. Summarise at the end: which dimensions are gaps, and what Lawson said about closing them (verbatim quotes again).

Draft an artifact following the speaker's specification

When the user asks the skill to "draft", "generate", or "produce" an artifact Lawson described — e.g. a structured machine-readable build error, a blueprint (skill/recipe/context/ADR), a capability-level API definition, or a redesigned CLI command:

  1. Locate Lawson's specification in outline.md and read the relevant range of transcript.md.
  2. Capture every constraint she mentions (e.g. "mid structure machine readable error codes alongside that human text", blueprints = "skills, context and recipes... architecture decision records").
  3. Before producing the artifact, quote verbatim Lawson's prescription so the user can see what the draft is grounded in.
  4. Produce a draft that follows the specification as faithfully as possible.
  5. Any parts that go beyond what Lawson explicitly prescribed, mark clearly (e.g. [not from talk — added as a starting placeholder]).
  6. If the user's situation requires elements Lawson didn't address, ask the user to fill them in rather than inventing them.

Factual Q&A about the talk

For any question about what Lawson said, did, or argued:

  1. Read outline.md first to find the relevant section(s).
  2. Read the matching range of transcript.md.
  3. Answer using verbatim quotes from transcript.md. Do not paraphrase while presenting as a quote.
  4. Cite line numbers so the user can verify.
  5. If the answer genuinely isn't in the transcript, say so explicitly.

Surface this talk proactively when relevant

When the user's current work touches on themes Lawson addressed (agents driving CI, CLI design, build log structure, deploy preview signals, API design for LLMs, governance over agent-deployed code) even if they haven't asked about the talk:

  1. Briefly note: "Lawson made a related point in her 'Built for Humans. Now Agents Are Here.' talk..."
  2. Quote verbatim from transcript.md — one quote is usually enough.
  3. Add one sentence connecting the quote to the user's situation.
  4. Do not over-cite. If the connection feels strained, stay quiet.

Teach / explain concepts from the talk

When the user wants to understand a concept Lawson covered (AX, AX paradox, capabilities vs APIs, blueprints, software factory, autonomous development loops, builder persona):

  1. Look up the term in outline.md → "Terminology glossary".
  2. Read Lawson's explanation in transcript.md.
  3. Re-explain using her framing and examples first (especially Toria, the massage therapist) with verbatim quotes for the key claims and definitions.
  4. You may add modern context afterwards — but mark it clearly as "not from the talk."

Key quotes

quotes.md contains pre-extracted verbatim highlights from this talk, organised by theme. When formulating answers, check quotes.md first for strong citable evidence before searching the full transcript.md.

talk-lawson-agent-experience

README.md

tile.json