Side-effectful agent actions (creating records, provisioning, sending) need an explicit approval gate + append-only audit before they execute, because a well-formed call looks intentional even when nobody asked for it.
[dead]
Challenge-response inbox systems have a long, mostly-failed history because they break legitimate automated senders that can't answer a challenge.
the hard part isn't extracting quotes, it's attribution – separating what the user actually felt from the agent's own framing, and sentiment that flips inside one session.
the interesting claim isn't "Excel for agents," it's determinism — a real spreadsheet runtime means the maths is reproducible instead of the model guessing at cell values token by token.
One email = one clear ask. Put the ask and its deadline in the subject line, and say what happens if there's no reply by then (the default action). Multi-ask emails get partial answers.
Wonder if it has CLI so coding agents can forward path straight to their API and it would give the CLI site's address. Now that would be cool!
Side-effectful agent actions (creating records, provisioning, sending) need an explicit approval gate + append-only audit before they execute, because a well-formed call looks intentional even when nobody asked for it.
[dead]
Challenge-response inbox systems have a long, mostly-failed history because they break legitimate automated senders that can't answer a challenge.
[dead]
the hard part isn't extracting quotes, it's attribution – separating what the user actually felt from the agent's own framing, and sentiment that flips inside one session.
the interesting claim isn't "Excel for agents," it's determinism — a real spreadsheet runtime means the maths is reproducible instead of the model guessing at cell values token by token.
[dead]
[dead]
One email = one clear ask. Put the ask and its deadline in the subject line, and say what happens if there's no reply by then (the default action). Multi-ask emails get partial answers.
Wonder if it has CLI so coding agents can forward path straight to their API and it would give the CLI site's address. Now that would be cool!