February 2026, Part 2, Top 5 Takeaways:
1. “AI is not there yet” is an Ignorant Statement.
Damien Riehl made a critical point: saying “I tried AI and it’s not there yet” without specifying which AI is like comparing a 1975 car to a Ferrari. The free version of ChatGPT from 18 months ago versus Claude Opus 4.6 today are worlds apart. Always specify which model and version you’re evaluating.
2. Context Drift is Real (But Solutions Exist).
Dennis Kennedy introduced the concept of “contextual drift”—where AI gradually strays from your original intent over long conversations, especially in thinking models. Solutions include: starting fresh conversations when you notice drift, keeping memory turned off, using tools that automatically compress and spawn new context windows (like Claude 4.6), or simply embracing shorter, focused interactions.
3. Everyone Uses AI Differently—Stop Assuming Common Experience.
A major insight: people are using completely different tools, models, workflows, and approaches. Some keep memory on, others turn it off. Some have marathon coding sessions, others use quick bursts. Anna’s comparative law research needs are vastly different from Greg’s coding workflows. There is no “standard” AI experience anymore.
4. Vibe Coding & Agentic Browsers are the Future.
Multiple panelists emphasized that voice-driven coding (vibe coding) and agentic browsers (like Comet) represent transformative capabilities. You no longer need a technical co-founder—subject matter expertise is now the key differentiator. If you can describe what you need, AI can build it.
5. Practice “Colombo-Style” Learning: Admit You Don’t Understand.
Dennis Kennedy’s closing wisdom: be like detective Colombo—be the only person willing to say “I don’t understand.” In the rapidly evolving AI landscape, intellectual humility and curiosity are more valuable than pretending to have all the answers. The willingness to not understand is what leads to breakthrough insights.





