Strategic Significance:
- Conductor demonstrates a shift in the software lifecycle where the primary artifact is the prompt workflow rather than the source code. By enforcing a review-gated PR flow, the platform attempts to solve the 'AI drift' problem—where agents optimize code into incomprehensible or buggy states.
Who Should Care:
- Startup CTOs and software engineers who want to scale productivity through agent orchestration platforms rather than just individual coding tools.
- Those building developer tooling who need to navigate the tension between opinionated workflows and user requests for configurability.
Contrarian Takeaway:
- Higher agent capability might lead to less code, not more. By focusing on 'token-maxing' and fast, small model interactions, developers can reduce codebase bloat, treating the resulting lines of code as disposable 'sawdust' that can be regenerated whenever models improve.
