@rryssf In this example's context a team could be comprised of humans using agents or an agent system comprised within a team of developers. Is that what you're asking?
@rryssf It seamed(see what I did there ๐) like the models are still continually being updated and the only way to work as fast as the bleeding edge is to remain as agent agnostic as possible. This also provides an optimal substrate for transportable work amongst a team of developers.
"But human brains aren't multi-threaded."
I didn't come up with the words, but they fit, magically.
Also, we're now spirit animals. Thank you for your service.
The more I use AI, the less human I become
Probably the most disturbing thing I've discovered about myself this year.
Three ways AI is changing me:
1. Emotionally flat
AI doesn't have emotions. It's just 1+1=2, pure efficiency. After months of primarily interacting with AI employees, I've become the same way.
Someone on my team gets upset? "Ugh, annoying, I don't have time for this."
I used to manage human emotions constantly. Now it's all AI workers with zero emotional needs. I'm becoming brutally rational to the point of being robotic.
2. Living on AI schedule
Theoretically AI works for me. Reality? I work for AI.
AI doesn't sleep, so I optimize tasks for nighttime execution. I brief it before bed, make sure instructions are perfect so it doesn't waste 8 hours.
AI interrupts me every 2 minutes with updates, so I respond every 2 minutes to not slow it down.
My life rhythm, work schedule, even sleep patterns - all optimized around AI efficiency, not human needs.
3. ADHD on steroids
This one is brutal.
I start one AI task, waiting is inefficient, so I open another tab for a second task. Still waiting, open a third. Then suddenly all three are finished and demanding attention.
But human brains aren't multi-threaded. I can't context-switch like AI spawns subagents.
After an hour of constant task-switching, I'm mentally drained. My brain used to last 5 hours of focused work. Now 1 hour of AI coordination leaves me exhausted.
But I can't slow down because that would slow down the AI workers. So no breaks, no mental recovery.
The pattern I'm seeing:
Every person who uses AI effectively works longer hours, has worse ADHD, and becomes more machine-like.
If someone doesn't have ADHD, they probably can't use AI well.
So my new interview question: "How's your attention span?"
If they say "pretty good, I can focus for hours," they're probably terrible with AI.
The productivity gains are real. But the human cost is also real.
I don't know what the long-term implications are. But everyone in my circle who's good with AI is becoming less... human.
Anyone else experiencing this?