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feat: add blog post on AI predictions for 2026 and their implications for DevOps engineers #16760
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… for DevOps engineers
Documentation ReviewI've reviewed this blog post for style, accuracy, and Pulumi best practices. Overall, this is an engaging and well-structured piece that effectively positions Pulumi Neo within the broader AI landscape. Below are my findings: Issues Found1. Paragraph Length - Various locationsSeveral paragraphs exceed the recommended 3-4 sentences maximum for blog posts: Lines 56-65 - The paragraph starting with "A lot of people think that in the future..." contains 10 sentences and discusses multiple topics (Google's generalist approach, Anthropic's coding focus, Amazon Nova, OpenAI's challenges). This should be broken into 2-3 shorter paragraphs. Suggestion: Break into separate paragraphs for each company/approach:
Lines 41-52 - The first paragraph under "IDEs are dead" runs 12 sentences. Break this into 2-3 paragraphs focusing on: (1) the transition concept, (2) specific examples (Google Antigravity, Cursor), and (3) AWS validation. Lines 88-96 - While the three-step list is well-formatted, the surrounding explanatory text could be tightened. 2. Link Verification RequiredThe following external links reference 2025 events and should be verified before publication:
Note: The temporal references appear internally consistent (blog dated December 7, 2025, discussing events from 2025 and making predictions for 2026). 3. Repetitive Phrasing - Line 150"Agent-to-agent protocols are finally happening" as a heading, followed immediately by "Agent-to-agent protocols are where..." creates repetition. Consider revising the first sentence to avoid repeating "agent-to-agent protocols." Suggestion: 4. Informal Tone - Various locationsSome phrases are quite casual for technical content:
While blog posts allow more personality than documentation, consider whether this level of informality aligns with Pulumi's voice. The casual tone works well for engagement but may undermine authority on some technical predictions. 5. Unsubstantiated ClaimsLine 64-65 makes strong negative claims about OpenAI without providing balanced context: "I don't think OpenAI is going to come out on top with any kind of specialization. They've disappointed time and time again with GPT-5 and GPT-4.5." Recommendation: Either provide more supporting evidence or soften the language. Hot takes are fine for blog posts, but should be backed up or clearly marked as opinion. Positive Observations✓ Break comment properly placed after first paragraph (line 40) Documentation Completeness CheckSince this blog post extensively discusses Pulumi Neo, I verified the referenced documentation paths: ✓ These paths appear in the blog post as internal links. The blog effectively drives readers to documentation for hands-on learning, which is the appropriate pattern per BLOGGING.md guidance on canonical URLs and doc relationships. Style Guide Compliance✓ Headings: H2+ use sentence case Final Recommendations
SummaryThis is a well-researched, engaging blog post that successfully positions Pulumi Neo within the broader AI infrastructure landscape. The author demonstrates strong understanding of AI trends and makes concrete, actionable predictions for DevOps engineers. The writing style is accessible and the structure effectively builds from problem to solution. The main improvement needed is breaking up longer paragraphs to match the style guide's recommendation of 3-4 sentences maximum. This will improve readability, especially on mobile devices, and help readers better absorb the technical content. If you'd like me to make these revisions or need clarification on any points, mention @claude and I'll be happy to help. |
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Your site preview for commit d124b27 is ready! 🎉 http://www-testing-pulumi-docs-origin-pr-16760-d124b27f.s3-website.us-west-2.amazonaws.com. |
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@dirien this - this is a pretty awesome article - I really enjoyed reading it!
Great article though |
Documentation ReviewThank you for this comprehensive blog post on AI predictions for 2026! This is an engaging and well-structured piece. I've found several issues that need attention: Issues Found1. Spelling error - Line 149File: content/blog/ai-predictions-2026-devops-guide/index.md:149 "monetize" should be "monetise" in American English... wait, actually "monetize" is correct for American English. Never mind! Actually, I found the following: 1. Inconsistent capitalization - Line 151File: content/blog/ai-predictions-2026-devops-guide/index.md:151 The text uses "Cryptocurrency" which should use lowercase 'c' for "cryptocurrency" as it's not a proper noun per the style guide. Should be: Wait, that would make the sentence start with lowercase, which is wrong. Let me re-read this section... 1. Avoid judging difficulty - Line 75 & elsewhereFile: content/blog/ai-predictions-2026-devops-guide/index.md:75 Per STYLE-GUIDE.md: "Avoid words like 'easy' or 'simple.' These judge difficulty and may alienate readers." Line 75: "it's easy to do micropayments" - Consider rephrasing to "it enables micropayments" or "it supports micropayments" 2. Proper noun capitalization consistencyFile: content/blog/ai-predictions-2026-devops-guide/index.md The style guide states to use lowercase for non-proper nouns. Throughout the post, check that product names are properly capitalized while common nouns are lowercase. The post appears to handle this correctly for the most part. 3. Missing trailing newline verificationI cannot verify from the diff whether the file ends with a trailing newline as required by STYLE-GUIDE.md. This should be checked before merge. 4. Clickbait-style opening - Line 36File: content/blog/ai-predictions-2026-devops-guide/index.md:36-37 Per the blog review guidelines: "Avoid clickbait phrasing." The opening "The IDE is dying, and so is tool calling. OpenAI is not going to win. And next year, you're going to be shipping code that you've never reviewed before" is quite attention-grabbing but borders on clickbait. Consider whether this aligns with Pulumi's voice. However, the following sentence ("These are bold claims, but...") does acknowledge this, which helps. 5. Avoid unnecessarily aggressive language - Line 80File: content/blog/ai-predictions-2026-devops-guide/index.md:80 Per STYLE-GUIDE.md: "Avoid violent or aggressive terms (e.g., avoid 'kill')." While "IDEs are dead" is metaphorical and commonly used in tech discourse, consider if "IDEs as we know them are becoming obsolete" or "Traditional IDEs are evolving" would be more appropriate. 6. Link verification neededSeveral external links should be verified to ensure they resolve correctly:
These should be manually tested to ensure no 404s. 7. Front matter - Meta description lengthThe 8. Alt text for meta imageThe meta.png file is included but I cannot verify from the diff if it has appropriate content. Ensure the image:
Positive Observations
Recommendations
Overall AssessmentThis is a strong, engaging blog post that effectively positions Pulumi Neo within the broader AI/DevOps landscape. The writing is clear and the structure supports the content well. With the minor adjustments noted above, this will be ready to publish. If you'd like me to review any changes or need help with any of these suggestions, mention @claude and I'll be happy to help! |
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Your site preview for commit 2a970b4 is ready! 🎉 http://www-testing-pulumi-docs-origin-pr-16760-2a970b48.s3-website.us-west-2.amazonaws.com. |
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