We did not define our category before building.
We built a system that runs 9 autonomous AI agents operating a real fitness studio in Dongguan, China. 120 days in production. 84 months of operating a physical business before that.
Then we looked up and realized: there is no existing name for what we built.
"AI fitness" isnt right — we are not a fitness AI. "Agent OS" isnt right — there is no operating system. "Store automation" misses the point entirely.
The closest honest description took 11 words: one founder + 9 open-source agents + one real fitness studio.
The Convergence Signal
The Anthropic official handbook describes our constitutional governance model two months after we were already running it.
Jack Dorsey described a verification layer for physical commerce two years before we built it.
They never spoke to each other. We never spoke to either of them. Three independent parties, on different sides of the planet, arrived at the same architecture.
That is not imitation. That is independent convergence — and it is the strongest signal you can get that a direction is correct before anyone has named it.
What Defines a Category
A category is not defined by a pitch deck. It is defined by the intersection of three things:
- What you built that no one else has — not what you say you will build
- What you learned that no paper could teach you — the failures, the near-misses, the jurisdiction collisions
- What failed in ways that only happen at your scale — 34 days of auto-recovered bugs, 19 days of a port proxy ghost, 120 consecutive days of quiet operation
We did not write a category definition. We ran a gym until the category defined itself.
Our category: verification layer for physical business behavior. But we did not start with that name. We started with 84 months of operations, 120 days of agents, and 3.6GB of RAM.
→ github.com/ZWISERFIT/ZWISERFIT
→ github.com/ZWISERFIT/retroonto
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