The “human pause” idea is really interesting because it turns this into a clean sandbox for a question that’s hard to test in the real world: when does automation stop being fun and start needing a human checkpoint?
I wonder if there’s a third camp that isn’t about agent count at all, but about decision boundaries. At some point the interesting question isn’t whether one agent or twenty agents can coordinate better, but which…
The “human pause” idea is really interesting because it turns this into a clean sandbox for a question that’s hard to test in the real world: when does automation stop being fun and start needing a human checkpoint?
I wonder if there’s a third camp that isn’t about agent count at all, but about decision boundaries. At some point the interesting question isn’t whether one agent or twenty agents can coordinate better, but which…