Introducing Television, the missing GUI for personal agents.
Television is a visual workspace for you and your agent, and our first step toward a new interface paradigm for agentic computers.
Now accepting alpha users, open source soon.
Just put up the latest episode of my podcast, A New Computer. In this episode @rupertmanfredi and I have a fun and far-ranging conversation with Mozilla CTO Raffi Krikorian about the role of open source in building the next personal computer. Rupert and I also chat about our new product (Television!), HTML artifacts, and… the pope?
So this is fun: I was interviewed by @iristenteije of @getdiffer about the future of interfaces and the work we're doing on Television. Read on for references to LCARS, the Altair, and Jenga towers.
https://t.co/ZbArNk1gxy
We need a UI layer for agents that isn't overly coupled to coding tasks. And it needs to be cross harness compatible.
I have a strong hunch that this is the one.
Really excited to try this.
Introducing Television, the missing GUI for personal agents.
Television is a visual workspace for you and your agent, and our first step toward a new interface paradigm for agentic computers.
Now accepting alpha users, open source soon.
Testing local models for our upcoming agent GUI. Qwen is all over the place. On one hand it generated the nicest looking weather artifact yet! On the other hand, it made this Markdown doc look like, uh, the Epstein Files.
Today, I'm excited to be launching "A New Computer"
it's a podcast from me and @stlhood, where we examine the end of the "personal computer" as we know it, and what comes next...
Having worked on early (too early) agentic computer use efforts, my conviction is that:
The ideal AI computer is not the computer you are using.
The ideal AI operating system is not the operating system you are using.
Today's reality of sweating token budgets feels like living through the 80's dial-up era again. We're all excitedly downloading warez at 1200bps via xmodem and hoping Dad doesn't pick up the phone halfway thru. Different scarcity, same feelings. And, someday, we'll look back on this moment with the same nostalgia.
llama.cpp continues to be one of the most important projects to the future of personal computing. You can draw a straight line from local, open-source inference to computers that users truly own and control.