Halfway through 2026, the noise about AI is deafening, but a handful of trends are genuinely defining the year. We’ve covered each one in depth; here’s the honest summary of what matters and why, with links to go deeper.
1. AI moves from suggesting to acting
The underlying shift of 2026: AI agents no longer just answer, they run tasks, read your files and work over your tools. The dream of full autonomy still isn’t here, but for scoped tasks the leap is real. We analyse it in the state of AI agents in 2026.
2. MCP consolidates as the “USB-C of AI”
Connecting AI to your data and tools stopped being a custom integration. MCP (Model Context Protocol) standardises those connections and is, in large part, what’s making agents useful. If you understand one technical thing this year, make it what MCP is.
3. Coding moves to the terminal with agents
Terminal agents (Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI) have become the most powerful way to code with AI: they see the whole repo and work across files. We compare the three in Claude Code vs Codex vs Gemini CLI.
4. Open source closes the gap
Open models (Llama, Qwen, Mistral) are no longer “the cheap plan B”: for many tasks they perform more than well enough and lower both cost and dependence on a single company. The 2026 question isn’t whether to use open source, but when it pays off.
5. Quality returns: human judgement over mass content
The year’s big lesson is counterintuitive: the more AI, the more valuable the human part. Mass, generic AI-generated content fails—Google penalises it and audiences ignore it—while real experience, judgement and your own voice are exactly what AI can’t copy.
Our take: what changes for you
- What really matters: it’s not following every announcement, but asking which concrete task you can already delegate or speed up. That’s where the real value is.
- The common thread across the five trends: AI is increasingly capable, but human judgement—what to do, what to review, what to publish—is worth more, not less.
- The mistake to avoid: getting carried away by the hype. Start small, measure the result and grow from there.
Our stance: 2026 isn’t the year AI replaces us, it’s the year it learns to use tools. The winner isn’t whoever uses the most AI, but whoever uses it wisely.
Conclusion
Five trends, one thread: AI acts, connects and democratises, but the judgement is still yours. If you want to stay a step ahead, start by understanding MCP and AI agents; that’s where the year is being decided.