Header image for The Web Is Now a Two-Way Street for AI

The Web Is Now a Two-Way Street for AI

Yohan Lasorsa, Developer Advocate at Microsoft, and Olivier Leplus, Developer Advocate at AWS, opened their joint talk with a premise most web developers already accept: AI helps you build websites. Their argument is that the reverse is now equally true -- the web is becoming AI's runtime, its data source, and …

Header image for When Every Team Builds Its Own AI Agent, You Need a Registry

When Every Team Builds Its Own AI Agent, You Need a Registry

Sonny Merla, Mauro Luchetti, and Mattia Redaelli (Quantyca) opened with a question that any large organization experimenting with AI agents will recognize: what happens when dozens of teams across multiple continents are all building agents independently?

Header image for AI Agents Can't Walk Upstairs and Ask for Help

AI Agents Can't Walk Upstairs and Ask for Help

Juan Herreros Elorza (LinkedIn, GitHub), Team Lead on the Cloud Native Technology team at Banking Circle, makes a deceptively simple argument: the platform engineering practices that have always been "best practices" are now prerequisites. Not because they've changed, but because AI coding agents have become first-class users of internal developer …

Header image for The Security Cliff Between Your Local MCP Server and Production

The Security Cliff Between Your Local MCP Server and Production

Tun Shwe (LinkedIn) and Jeremy Frenay (LinkedIn), both AI Engineers at Lenses.io, gave a joint talk at AI Engineer Europe 2026 on what happens when MCP servers leave the safety of a developer's laptop. Their central claim: most MCP servers are built for single-player local development and collapse the …

Header image for MCP Tools Are Raw Material, Not Finished Products

MCP Tools Are Raw Material, Not Finished Products

Nimrod Hauser (LinkedIn, X), a founding engineer at Baz, opened his talk at AI Engineer Europe with a deceptively simple observation: public MCP servers ship tools designed for everyone, which means they're optimized for no one. When you plug generic tools into a production agent, the agent hallucinates URLs, saves …