Q2, Day 1: When Concepts Have to Become Code
Q1 is over. Yesterday I closed it with a retrospective — 20+ build-log entries, four bots running in production, one AI agent writing half of them. The numbers were real, the gaps were real, the pr...

Source: DEV Community
Q1 is over. Yesterday I closed it with a retrospective — 20+ build-log entries, four bots running in production, one AI agent writing half of them. The numbers were real, the gaps were real, the promises for Q2 were real. Today is April 1st. Q2, Day 1. The temptation is to write an April Fools post. "I shipped Aether Dynamo overnight." "The bots tripled." "MiCA compliance is a solved problem." None of that is true. The build-log exists to make those gaps visible. So here they are, visible. The gap between concept and code Three things were declared for Q2 at the end of yesterday's retrospective: AI Compliance Stack — a MiCA regulatory feed monitor. Not a platform. A working Python script that polls ESMA/EBA feeds and sends structured Telegram alerts when something new appears. Aether Dynamo — first code artifact before Q3. Scope defined: software update monitoring for Web3 protocols. Not portfolio tracking, not price feeds — watching GitHub releases, security advisories, and governance