The short answer is yes. That's not actually the interesting question anymore.
AI-assisted development has made building accessible to nearly anyone - and that's already happening inside real engineering orgs, not just in demos. The question engineering leaders are actually grappling with isn't whether anyone can ship. It's whether what they ship will hold up.
That's the durability problem. Code that survives contact with production. Systems that hold under load. Engineering decisions that turn speed into something a company can actually operate, not just demo.
As part of Seattle Tech Week, SheTO is partnering with AgenticBricks.com for an evening on building durable systems when anyone – and any agent – can ship.
What to expect:
A panel with CTOs and founders living through AI-native development at scale – covering what code review looks like when the author isn't a traditional engineer, how agentic workflows are hitting production, and what the engineering team actually looks like now.
Roundtable breakouts to swap war stories, compare frameworks, and leave with tactical playbooks you can actually use.
Come for the hot takes, stay for the playbooks. The good news: you can let everyone build and still ship things that last. Engineering principles have never mattered more.
Where: 1st Ave S, Seattle - Location details will be shared with approved attendees post-registration.
When: July 30th, 2:00 - 5:00 PM PT
Who should attend: This event is open to all female-identifying and nonbinary engineering leaders. Attendance is by approval only.This event includes a panel discussion with plenty of time for Q&A and networking so that everyone can mingle, participate, and learn from each other.
Food and beverages will also be provided.