The first AI workflow question I ask is not “which model?”
It is “what can this agent touch?”
Read-only first. Draft-only next. Write access only after approval, logs, and rollback exist.
That order keeps useful automation from becoming a production incident.
I would not start an AI workflow sprint by changing the stack.
I would pick one queue, define the approval step, log every model suggestion, and ship the first pass into the tool ops already uses.
Most AI workflow failures are handoff failures.
Who owns the draft?
Who approves it?
What changed after approval?
Can we replay the decision later?
If those answers are unclear, the model is not the hard part.
I do not want agents auto-sending invoices, emails, or account changes.
I want them to prepare the work, show their sources, capture approval, and leave a log clean enough that finance, ops, and engineering can debug it later.
I like local AI for the boring reason: cost ceilings. If a workflow has to read every invoice, ticket, or inbox thread, per-token pricing turns into a hidden approval gate.
Run the routine pass locally, escalate the weird cases, log both.
For field-service operators, the AI opportunity is usually not replacing dispatch.
It is giving dispatch a cleaner first pass:
summary, priority, missing info, customer history, equipment context, and a drafted follow-up.
Human approves. Work moves faster.
🚨 Breaking: Bitcoin is about to go parabolic! No Bitcoin available in OTC market while BlackRock customers are buying hundreds of millions in Bitcoin daily.
The cryptocurrency market is experiencing a supply shortage due to high demand for Bitcoin from big investors like BlackRock. This could lead to a continuous rise in Bitcoin price, surpassing historical highs.
Please note that the cryptocurrency market is highly volatile, and predictions about the future price of Bitcoin are hard to make with accuracy. However, the supply shortage and increased demand are factors that cannot be ignored and could significantly impact the Bitcoin price in the future.
OTC stands for "Over-the-Counter," which refers to Bitcoin transactions that are made directly between buyers and sellers, without the need for an exchange platform. This allows people with large sums of money to buy or sell Bitcoin privately and without affecting the market price. In short, it's a more discreet way to trade Bitcoin.
For example, someone might want to buy $100 million in Bitcoin without making the price rise. To do this, they could use an OTC service to buy directly from a seller, avoiding exchanges and keeping their transaction anonymous.
Please note that the supply shortage and increased demand are factors that cannot be ignored and could significantly impact the Bitcoin price in the future.
I like Bitcoin, but I love Dogecoin 🚀
Been working with some awesome people on LinkedIn! If you do Social Saturdays we are doing an airdrop for some NFTs. Just post about yourself and your public address and I will sned them out tomorrow!
https://t.co/eyM6RD1YBu