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The February 2020 Feeling: Why Some Believe AI Has Reached an Inflection Point

It's February 2026. An exponential process is unfolding—one with the potential to reshape economies, labor markets, and institutions. Yet outside tech circles, daily life continues largely unchanged. To some in AI development and adjacent fields, this moment feels eerily familiar: like February 2020, when a novel coronavirus was already spreading globally, but most people had yet to grasp the scale of disruption ahead.

This analogy has gained traction recently—not because AI poses an acute crisis like a pandemic, but because a qualitative shift in capability has occurred. The emergence of *agentic* AI systems—tools that can pursue multi-step objectives with minimal human intervention—has moved the technology beyond the chatbot paradigm. Where systems like early ChatGPT functioned as interactive encyclopedias, newer agents can draft code, test it, debug failures, iterate on feedback, and integrate with external tools like calendars, databases, and APIs—all within a single session.

This shift matters. In late 2024 and throughout 2025, demonstrations proliferated: non-technical users building functional web apps via natural language prompts; developers offloading 30–50% of routine coding tasks to agents; legal and finance teams using AI to monitor regulatory filings or draft contract clauses with human review. Tools like Anthropic's Claude (with its "Projects" feature), OpenAI's GPT-4o with advanced tool use, and open-source frameworks like LangGraph enabled workflows that previously required step-by-step human guidance.

The market noticed. Starting in Q4 2025, software stocks—particularly in project management, low-code platforms, and routine enterprise services—faced pressure as investors questioned long-term defensibility. Monday.com, Asana, and others saw volatility, though not the 20% single-week drops described in viral social media posts. More telling was the capital reallocation: venture funding shifted from point-solution AI startups toward infrastructure, agent orchestration layers, and evaluation frameworks.


Why the hype—and why skepticism remains

Three developments fueled the "vibe shift":


1. **Tool integration matured**: Agents gained reliable access to browsers, code interpreters, and enterprise APIs, enabling closed-loop workflows.

2. **Cost efficiency became tangible**: At $20–200/month per seat, agents began delivering measurable ROI for specific tasks—especially in software engineering, data analysis, and content operations.

3. **Self-improvement loops emerged**: Labs like Anthropic and OpenAI reported that AI-assisted coding now accounts for 40–70% of internal development (not "nearly 100%"), accelerating iteration cycles.


Yet critical constraints persist:


- **Reliability gaps**: Agents still hallucinate, make logic errors, or take unsafe actions in ~10–30% of complex tasks—unacceptable for high-stakes domains without human oversight.

- **Adoption friction**: Legacy enterprises move slowly. Regulatory sectors (healthcare, law, finance) face compliance barriers that limit autonomous deployment.

- **Diminishing returns**: While narrow capabilities improve rapidly, general reasoning, creativity, and contextual judgment remain uneven. The "exponential doubling" narrative (e.g., METR's 7-month metric) applies to specific benchmarks—not holistic intelligence.

- **Economic absorption takes time**: Even transformative technologies face deployment lags. Electricity took 40 years to reshape manufacturing; AI's broad labor impact will unfold over decades, not months.


Beyond the singularity script


The February 2020 analogy contains wisdom and danger. Wisdom: early signals of systemic change are often dismissed until disruption is undeniable. Danger: pandemics spread inexorably through biology; technological adoption follows human choices—regulation, investment, cultural acceptance, and ethical guardrails.


AI will displace certain white-collar tasks. It will also create new roles, augment others, and—like previous automation waves—redistribute economic value unevenly. The question isn't whether AI will transform work (it already is), but *how societies choose to manage that transition*: through retraining, safety nets, labor policy, and deliberate governance.


The asteroid isn't descending. But the tectonic plates are shifting. And unlike dinosaurs, we can see the fault lines—if we choose to look.