DOP 345: From Chat Prompt to Working Software with Kiro episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 8, 2026 · 38 MIN

DOP 345: From Chat Prompt to Working Software with Kiro

from DevOps Paradox · host Darin Pope & Viktor Farcic

#345: Vibe coding works fine until your project gets complicated. That's the gap Amit Patel and his team at AWS built Kiro to fill. The tool launched with about six people in mid-2024, hit GA around October 2025, and the team still fits in a single room -- maybe a seven-pizza team by Darin's math. The core idea is spec-driven development, but not the kind where business analysts disappear for five years and come back with a document nobody needs anymore. Amit's version: you tell the agent what you want in a chat prompt, it writes the spec for you, and you iterate on it. Twenty minutes of back and forth and you've got requirements, a design, and a task breakdown. Then the agent executes. Two to three days later, working software. Here's where it gets interesting. Amit frames the human role as bookends. At the front, you define intent -- what needs to exist and why. At the back, you verify that what got built actually matches. Everything in the middle? That's where the tooling lives. And that middle is getting wider every month as agents run longer, handle more turns, and start working in parallel. But the gap between 'I can build it' and 'I built it right' is real. Amit's S3 example nails it. Ask an LLM to build a file upload app and you'll get one that works. Encryption at rest, encryption in transit, KMS, bucket policies -- none of that shows up unless you know to ask for it. The LLM will generate all of it on request. It just won't volunteer it. That's the experience gap, and it's why junior developers still need to become senior developers the old-fashioned way. One story that landed: a product manager on Amit's team used Kiro to go from conversation to working prototype overnight. Not a wireframe. Not a doc. A demo the engineering team could put into production. The roles aren't disappearing -- they're getting more fluid. The value was never in the writing. It was always in knowing what needed to be built. Kiro is now widely adopted inside AWS, with both an IDE and a CLI. Where it's headed next: agents that run in the background, handle multiple tasks at once, and get verified with formal methods instead of just hoping the output is right. But Amit's honest about the limits -- steering file adherence is, in his words, an art in itself. Non-deterministic LLMs will ignore your rules sometimes. Just like humans.   Amit's contact information: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amit-patel-040453/   YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/devopsparadox   Review the podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://www.devopsparadox.com/review-podcast/   Slack: https://www.devopsparadox.com/slack/   Connect with us at: https://www.devopsparadox.com/contact/

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DOP 345: From Chat Prompt to Working Software with Kiro

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DevOps In Agile Way Pawel Piwosz "DevOps in Agile Way" is a captivating podcast that immerses listeners in the dynamic realm of DevOps, engineering practices, value streams, Clouds, AWS, Agile methodologies, and a myriad of other captivating subjects. Through engaging conversations and expert insights, this podcast serves as a bridge between all interested parties, fostering collaboration and enabling efficient software delivery.Join me on a deep dive into the fascinating intricacies of DevOps, where I explore cutting-edge tools, share best practices, and offer real-world anecdotes from industry experts. From continuous integration and deployment pipelines to automation of infrastructure and cloud-native architectures, I unravel the latest trends and strategies that empower organizations to achieve swift and dependable software delivery.Our exploration extends to the Agile methodology, highlighting its seamless integration with DevOps practices and its pivotal role in driving iterative development, cr DevOps and Docker Talk: Cloud Native Interviews and Tooling Bret Fisher Interviews from Bret Fisher's live show with co-host Nirmal Mehta. Topics cover container and cloud topics like Docker, Kubernetes, Swarm, Cloud Native development, DevOps, SRE, GitOps, DevSecOps, platform engineering, and the full software lifecycle. Full show notes and more info available at https://podcast.bretfisher.com Data Legends: Stories From The IT Trenches ChaosSearch Data Legends: Stories From The IT Trenches is a podcast for CIOs, CTOs, DevOps and SRE leaders who are stealthily shaping the success of businesses around the world. Each episode will feature a conversation with a Data Legend about their unique experiences, lessons learned, and battle scars earned as they’ve navigated the rapidly changing IT and Engineering landscape. If you want to be compelled and inspired by stories of people, processes and technologies that have banded together to manage data at scale, you’ve come to the right place.Welcome to Data Legends! Silent Paradox Asian Serenity “Silent Paradox” blends soft erhu and bamboo flute to create a soundscape where silence and movement coexist. This meditative track invites listeners to contemplate the harmony between stillness and subtle transitions, ideal for soothing stress or settling into focused work.

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#345: Vibe coding works fine until your project gets complicated. That's the gap Amit Patel and his team at AWS built Kiro to fill. The tool launched with about six people in mid-2024, hit GA around October 2025, and the team still fits in a single...

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