Agentic Coding Is Not a Trap: I Answered the Viral HN Post With My Own Production Logs I made the exact mistake that viral post criticizes: I gave an agent an ambiguous task and went to make coffee. Came back 40 minutes later to 23 modified files, three broken tests, and a refactor nobody asked for. I'm not telling this to complain — I'm telling it because that day I started keeping logs of my agent sessions, and what I found contradicts both the HN post and the usual evangelists. "Agentic Coding Is a Trap" currently sits at 367 points on Hacker News. The central argument is that agents give you the illusion of speed while silently accumulating technical debt. It's a good argument. It's also incomplete. And I have the numbers to prove it. Real Agentic Coding Productivity in Production: What My Logs Actually Say I keep a simple CSV. Date, task, estimated manual time, real time with agent, outcome: saved / rabbit hole / neutral. It's not science — it's my field notebook.…