
John Allsopp
Co-founder and operator of Web Directions, the Australian conference series for web, product, design, engineering, and AI practitioners. He is also a long-time web developer, speaker, writer, and author known for work on web standards, CSS, microformats, and the essay “A Dao of Web Design.”
AI Engineering Must Preserve Craft as Work Shifts to Verification
At AI Engineer Melbourne, Jeremy Howard, Annie Vella and Mic Neale each argued against treating AI adoption as an automatic productivity upgrade. Howard warned that coding tools can simulate autonomy and flow while eroding mastery; Vella presented research showing engineers feel more productive even as parts of developer experience deteriorate; and Neale made the case for pooling idle edge devices as an alternative to defaulting all inference to centralized, metered infrastructure.
The Model Alone Is No Longer the AI Product
At AI Engineer Melbourne 2026’s Day 1 keynote program, speakers including Shawn Wang, George Cameron, Sarah Sachs, Igor Costa, Vamsi Ramakrishnan and Geoffrey Huntley argued that AI engineering has moved beyond picking the strongest model. Their shared case was that useful AI products now depend on the systems around models: harnesses, routing, evals, memory, state, latency budgets, deterministic tools and cost controls. The model still matters, but the keynote program framed product advantage as an architecture and economics problem, not a leaderboard problem.