You know the Scrum lifecycle by heart. A PM hands off a ticket. The team refines it, gets some acceptance criteria, pulls it into the sprint. Coding starts. Halfway through, you find a gap in the logic. You ping a stakeholder. You drag two engineers into a Zoom huddle to figure out something nobody thought about during refinement. You finish, hand it to QA, and the tester finds an edge case in 12 minutes flat. Back to refinement. Back to dev. Back to QA. We call this "iteration." But after watching AI rip through this workflow over the last year, I'm starting to think we just gave a fancy name to "we didn't plan very well." The bottleneck moved In an AI-first workflow, implementation isn't the slow part anymore. The typing of the code is becoming the shortest phase. Which means the two-week sprint, that sacred container we've all built our careers around, is starting to feel less like agility and more like artificial friction.…