I have been doing this job for 30 years. I still love it as much as I did when I first saw the Internet and Linux on November 29, 1995, and got sucked into sysadmin tasks.
To me, it seems that AI agents have enabled me to keep my infrastructure changes in Git (as I always did, using etckeeper and local Git repositories on my machines) but in a code and text form that I can review and store for later reference and documentation.
In fact, documentation is underrated. It is useful for me, so I always kept local notes on my machines in the form of:
yyyy-mm-dd-topic-of-change.txt
This allowed for quick lookups using grep to see what I changed. I always made sure to include all commands and outputs, because this file was the result of testing changes and was used to deploy them to production.
Nowadays, I have a local Git repository with code and documentation in a much more verbose form.
I really like that. I didn't write that content myself, but I read every line of it.
Did my work change? In one sense, no, but the result is totally different.
This is not quite GitOps or DevOps, but it suits my workflow.
Did I get a speedup?
Yes, 10x on most tasks.
If I can think of a solution to a problem in a few seconds, and spend 10-30 seconds more typing it into my agent, the task is done.
Commands can be executed much faster, but I still need time to process output. That's why I love ds4 from antirez, which I run on my local Aimax machine.
Its reading speed is ~10 tok/s for generation, and modem-like (with a progress bar!) for tokenization at ~50 tok/s. This provides just enough time to read everything and make sure that I'm not generating AI slop.
Am I getting dumber?
No, in fact, I can skim-read up to 200 tok/s since I use AI as my second brain. If I see something with which I don't agree, it's time to stop the agent (or use /btw in Gemini agy) and steer it in the right direction.
But more often than not, I'm learning something that the agent knew and I didn't. In the last year, I learned as much as I did in the three years before that. It's amazing what the Internet can surface to you if you use the biggest agents.
I think Gemini has the best web search of all agents, and since the Google index has been in RAM since we last saw the "Cached" option in Google search, I suspect that search results in agents are best in agy. Agents still don't search Google as I do. I know that the secret of Google search is skip lists, so I start with the most probable word and add more words to filter the results. Agents are more verbose than that, but they are quite good.
Are we getting locked-in?
Yes and no. Local agents (like DeepSeek v4) are really as good as SOTA models for everything I tried. I'm not afraid that I'm burning dinosaurs in vain.
My local AI usage of 85W should be offset by solar energy in the future, so it's sustainable for the planet.
On the other hand, I did spend the equivalent of about 8 years of a Gemini subscription to acquire my AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 machine, but having something locally which works and doesn't come with strings attached was worth it to me.
Let's see how these thoughts stand up to the test of time, since this was written in May 2026, and who knows what the future will bring.