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'Vibe Coding' Inventor Andrej Karpathy Has a New Term for A.I. Engineering
Karpathy's latest concept reframes A.I.-assisted coding as a disciplined engineering practice rather than a weekend experiment. Last February, OpenAI co-founder and Tesla Autopilot's founding engineer, Andrej Karpathy, accidentally coined a now-ubiquitous term when he tweeted about "vibe coding." The phrase described a form of A.I.-aided coding that lowered the barrier to entry for software engineering and soon took both hobbyists and Silicon Valley by storm. To celebrate the one-year anniversary of that viral moment, Karpathy has introduced a new, albeit less snappy, phrase: "agentic engineering." Sign Up For Our Daily Newsletter Sign Up Thank you for signing up! By clicking submit, you agree to our <a href="http://observermedia.com/terms">terms of service</a> and acknowledge we may use your information to send you emails, product samples, and promotions on this website and other properties. You can opt out anytime. See all of our newsletters The difference? While vibe coding was mostly for fun and powered by early A.I. coding tools, agentic engineering represents a more advanced phase of software development that is becoming increasingly common in professional settings. The term's inclusion of "agentic" makes sense because, for the most part, engineers no longer write code directly. Instead, they direct and oversee agents that do, Karpathy said in a recent post on X. And "Engineering" emphasizes "that there is an art and science and expertise to it," he explained. Karpathy said he was taken aback by the buzz his initial vibe coding post generated, calling it a "throwaway tweet that I just fired off without thinking." But the researcher's storied career in the A.I. industry lends his views added credibility. Online searches for the term exploded last year, according to Google Trends, and the phenomenon was featured in countless news articles and think pieces. It was even named Collins Dictionary's word of the year for 2025. A member of OpenAI's 11-person founding team, Karpathy focused on generative modeling, computer vision and reinforcement learning at the ChatGPT-maker before leaving for Tesla in 2017 to lead its Autopilot efforts. Karpathy returned to OpenAI in 2023, then departed again a year later to launch Eureka Labs, an A.I. education company. Outside of A.I. development, he also has more than 1.2 million followers on YouTube, where he posts educational tutorials. A lot has changed in a year. While vibe coding originally referred to engineers experimenting with A.I. on casual weekend projects, Karpathy noted that large language models (LLMs) have improved so much that their use is now commonplace among professional developers. That's where agentic engineering comes in. The approach aims to "claim the leverage from the use of agents but without any compromise on the quality of the software." The rapid evolution of A.I.-powered coding is reflected not just in new terminology, but in a surge of investment. Cursor, one of the startups at the heart of the vibe coding boom, raised $2.3 billion last November in a funding round that nearly tripled its valuation to $29.3 billion. Stockholm-based Lovable was valued at $6.6 billion the following month after raising $330 million. Replit, another major A.I. coding company, is reportedly nearing a new $400 million funding round that could push its valuation to $9 billion. These startups now face growing competition from established A.I. developers like Anthropic and OpenAI, both of which have doubled down on coding features in recent months. Besides his roles at major tech companies and his talent for viral buzzwords, Karpathy is also an active A.I. investor. He has backed 14 startups, according to Crunchbase, and invested in companies building the autonomous technologies behind trends like agentic engineering. That includes a 2024 funding round for /dev/agents, which is developing an operating system for A.I. agents, and a 2022 round for Adept, which builds assistants that can automate software workflows.
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OpenAI co-founder says agentic engineering is the next big thing in AI coding
He calls it agentic engineering not only because agents write the code, but because 'there is an art & science and expertise to it.' OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy says the future of AI coding is something he calls 'agentic engineering.' The idea comes just one year after another popular term, 'vibe coding,' emerged. Vibe coding is a way of working where humans guide AI tools with prompts, and the AI helps write the code. On the other hand, Karpathy says agentic engineering is when AI agents write the code themselves. 'Many people have tried to come up with a better name for this to differentiate it from vibe coding, personally, my current favorite is 'agentic engineering,' he wrote in a recent X post. Also read: Apple iOS 26.4 beta may release this month with smarter Siri: Check details According to Karpathy, the name matters because this approach is not just about automation. He explained that he calls it agentic engineering not only because agents write the code, but because 'there is an art & science and expertise to it.' Vibe coding has emerged as one of the most significant breakthroughs of the AI era. Leading CEOs and startup founders are promoting its adoption within their teams, while billions of dollars are poured into companies built around this new approach, reports Business Insider. Also read: Tim Cook discusses AI, succession and Apple's 50th anniversary at meeting: Here's what he said Vibe coding is also changing how engineers feel about their jobs. In a Business Insider survey of 167 software engineers, 75 said they were 'keeping up' with the changes. Another 30 felt ahead of the curve, while 27 said they felt behind. For those unaware, Karpathy helped found OpenAI in 2015, before rivals like Anthropic and xAI existed. Later, he led Tesla's Autopilot AI efforts. Now, he is building Eureka Labs, which aims to build a 'new kind of school that is AI native.'
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OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has introduced 'agentic engineering' to describe the next phase of AI coding, where AI agents independently write code rather than simply assisting developers. The term marks a shift from last year's viral 'vibe coding' concept, emphasizing disciplined engineering practice over casual experimentation as AI-powered development tools gain traction in professional settings.
OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has coined a new term to describe the evolution of AI coding: agentic engineering. Exactly one year after his casual tweet about vibe coding went viral and reshaped how Silicon Valley thinks about software development, Karpathy introduced this concept to capture how AI agents for software development now operate in professional environments
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. The distinction matters because agentic engineering represents a fundamental shift in how developers work. Instead of writing code directly, engineers now direct and oversee AI agents independently writing code, Karpathy explained in a recent post on X2
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Source: Digit
The evolution of AI in software engineering has accelerated dramatically over the past year. While vibe coding originally described engineers experimenting with AI-assisted coding on casual weekend projects, improvements in large language models have transformed these tools into essential resources for professional developers
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. Karpathy noted that LLMs have improved so substantially that their use is now commonplace among software engineers. According to Karpathy, he chose the term agentic engineering not only because agents write the code themselves, but because "there is an art and science and expertise to it"2
. The approach aims to claim the leverage from using agents without compromising software quality1
.The rapid adoption of AI coding tools has triggered massive investment across the sector. Cursor, one of the startups at the heart of the vibe coding boom, raised $2.3 billion last November in a funding round that nearly tripled its valuation to $29.3 billion
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. Stockholm-based Lovable was valued at $6.6 billion the following month after raising $330 million, while Replit is reportedly nearing a new $400 million funding round that could push its valuation to $9 billion1
. These startups now face growing competition from established players like Anthropic and OpenAI, both of which have doubled down on coding features in recent months1
.Related Stories
The shift toward automation in software development is reshaping how software engineers perceive their roles. In a Business Insider survey of 167 software engineers, 75 said they were keeping up with the changes, while 30 felt ahead of the curve and 27 said they felt behind
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. OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy's influence extends beyond coining viral terms. A member of OpenAI's 11-person founding team who focused on generative modeling, computer vision and reinforcement learning, Karpathy led Tesla Autopilot efforts before returning to OpenAI in 20231
. He now runs Eureka Labs, an AI education company building what he calls "a new kind of school that is AI native"2
. Karpathy is also an active investor, backing 14 startups including /dev/agents, which develops an operating system for AI agents, and Adept, which builds assistants that automate software workflows1
. As coding tools become more sophisticated and developers adapt to directing rather than directly writing code, the industry watches to see whether agentic engineering will achieve the same cultural resonance as vibe coding, which was named Collins Dictionary's word of the year for 20251
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Source: Observer
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