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What Changed in Software Development This Week Because of AI

Five facts from the past seven days, and what each one means for your Scrum team.

Rod Claar 0 452 Article rating: No rating

Five facts from the past week — a stronger Claude, metered Copilot billing, a cheap new Grok coding model, a more autonomous Cursor, and a permanent DeepSeek price cut — and what each means for your Scrum team.

What Changed in Software Development This Week Because of AI

A lot happened this week. IBM shipped a full-SDLC AI partner. ServiceNow handed over entire IT workflows to autonomous agents. Stanford released hard numbers on what AI is doing to developer jobs. Three thousand developers gathered in San Francisco to ask what software engineering even means now. And IBM held its annual Think conference in Boston to show enterprises how to run AI at scale. Here is what you need to know.

Rod Claar 0 1208 Article rating: No rating

This week brought five major developments at the intersection of AI and software development. IBM made its full-lifecycle AI development partner, Bob, generally available — reporting 45% productivity gains across 80,000 internal users. ServiceNow expanded its Autonomous Workforce at Knowledge 2026, with AI specialists now handling entire IT, CRM, HR, and security workflows end-to-end, resolving cases 99% faster than human agents. Stanford's 2026 AI Index delivered independent data showing a 26% productivity gain in software development alongside a nearly 20% drop in junior developer employment — and a jump in AI coding benchmark performance from 60% to near 100% in a single year. Three thousand developers gathered in San Francisco at AI Dev 26 x SF to wrestle with what software engineering even means now, landing on a shared conclusion: the bottleneck is no longer writing code, it's imagination. And IBM Think 2026 in Boston unveiled 150 prebuilt enterprise agents in watsonx Orchestrate, an AI operations platform for hybrid environments, and a new security tool that embeds vulnerability detection directly into the developer workflow. Each story carries a direct signal for Scrum and Agile teams navigating this shift.

Understanding the ScrumMaster's Daily Role: Facilitator, Coach, and Problem Solver in Agile Development

"Unlocking the ScrumMaster's Day: Roles, Challenges, and Impact on Agile Development Success"

Rodney Claar 0 3023 Article rating: No rating

A ScrumMaster plays a pivotal role in agile development, acting as a facilitator and coach to ensure the team adheres to Scrum principles. Unlike traditional managers, ScrumMasters focus on fostering collaboration and productivity without direct authority over the team. Their daily responsibilities include organizing Scrum events like daily stand-ups and sprint reviews to promote transparency and adaptation. They also work to remove any impediments that hinder team progress, provide coaching on Scrum practices, engage stakeholders to incorporate feedback, and promote continuous improvement through retrospectives and learning opportunities. Despite the challenges of managing team dynamics and varying organizational cultures, ScrumMasters are essential in empowering teams to deliver value and adapt to changing requirements. Their work involves a blend of facilitation, coaching, and problem-solving, making them the unsung heroes of agile development.

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