Photo by Robert Bye on Unsplash
In 1973, Scientific American published a study comparing locomotion efficiency across species. The condor won. Humans were unremarkable. But a human on a bicycle became the most efficient mover on the planet — by a wide margin.
Steve Jobs called the computer "a bicycle for the mind." I think we're looking at the next version of that bicycle.
I've been running a multi-agent AI workspace as my daily driver for two months. 638 commits, 134K tokens of steering rules, four customer accounts. Not a prototype — it's how I work now.
The key insight: the AI doesn't need better prompts. It needs to know how you work — your conventions, your quality bar, the things you check before you send a deliverable. Write that down, and every correction becomes a
permanent rule. The system compounds.
I wrote about what that actually looks like — what works, what surprised me, and what I'd tell someone staring at a blank editor wondering where to start.
Read the full article on AWS Builder Center: Like a Bicycle for the Brain
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