5G was never just about faster speeds. It promised ultra-low latency, edge computing, and smarter connectivity. Sounds perfect, right? Except for one minor hiccup: developers couldn’t access any of it. That’s finally changing.
What happens when two engineers turn Dungeons & Dragons into a testing ground for AI? They end up with a working AI-powered game engine that doubles as a blueprint for building more intelligent, reliable agentic systems.
Software design has always been human-centered. But in the age of AI agents, that’s starting to look like a limitation, not a virtue. The future of software is not in good UX, but in great AX.
Whether AI will replace human developers has become a typical headline. A recent talk at the Infobip Shift conference in Zadar took a more subtle approach: The future of software development isn’t a human-versus-machine battle but a new kind of collaboration.
Behind every text, voice call, and digital message that reaches our phones, there's a sprawling, complex system of servers, cables, and code. For a company like Infobip, which processes up to 10 billion messages a day, this infrastructure isn't just a foundation — it's a story of evolution.
What happens when AI agents stop just chatting and start acting, collaborating, and transforming business - powered by developers behind the scenes? Magic!
For AI agents to work for you you have to train them, refine them, and ultimately build a well-orchestrated agent-to-agent system that can deliver real value.