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Local Santa Monica Author Ani Malik Unveils Debut Book on AI's Radical Reshaping of Software Engineering

Malik, an engineering leader and builder based in Santa Monica, draws from firsthand observation of the industry's breakneck evolution.

SANTA MONICA, Calif. - In the heart of Silicon Beach, where tech innovation pulses through daily life, local author Ani Malik (pen name of Anmol) has released a timely and unflinching guide to the future of software development. Titled Hi BOIS: Build, Observe, Iterate, Ship, the debut book argues that artificial intelligence agents are not merely speeding up the traditional software development process-they are collapsing it entirely.

Published in February 2026 and available in Kindle and paperback formats on Amazon, the book presents the "BOIS Loop" as the new reality replacing the decades-old Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). What once took teams weeks or months across seven distinct stages-requirements gathering, design, implementation, testing, review, deployment, and monitoring-now condenses into a rapid, continuous cycle of building, observing results, iterating improvements, and shipping updates, often in minutes or hours.

Malik, an engineering leader and builder based in Santa Monica, draws from firsthand observation of the industry's breakneck evolution. "The SDLC shaped software for decades," the book's website states. "AI agents didn't make it faster. They collapsed it entirely." Rather than celebrating tool hype, Hi BOIS offers a pragmatic, human-centered perspective on this seismic shift.

The book candidly tackles the "dark side" of the transition: AI-driven burnout, the erosion of specialized roles, job disruption, and the urgent need for new skills. It emphasizes "context engineering"-crafting precise prompts and understanding AI outputs-as the emerging core competency, alongside heightened observability to catch errors in black-box systems, judgment over rote velocity, and responsibility in an automated world. Later chapters explore organizational restructuring, questioning who verifies AI-generated code and how teams adapt when traditional processes vanish.

Aimed at software engineers navigating role changes, engineering leaders redesigning teams, CTOs charting strategy, and community members curious about AI's impact on work, the book avoids optimism or denial. Instead, it provides an honest map for survival and thriving amid disruption.

"With Silicon Beach right in our backyard, many Santa Monica residents are tech professionals living this transformation daily," Malik said in a statement promoting the release. "This isn't just about new tools-it's about the future of work, critical thinking, and how we rebuild careers and companies around AI agents."

Hi BOIS is structured in four parts across 16 chapters, tracing the SDLC's origins, its collapse, the hard questions it raises (such as safety and verification), and what human skills remain essential. The first edition carries ISBN 978-82-494-3361-1.

Readers can find the book on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/Hi-BOIS-Build-Observe-Iterate/dp/B0GQC1L8RH/ or learn more at the official site https://hibois.com/.

As AI continues to redefine industries, Malik's local voice offers a grounded, forward-looking contribution to the conversation unfolding in Santa Monica and beyond.

 
 

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