The copilot analogy really nails the problem with current agentic interfaces. When you compare it to how music producers or photgraphers work with their tools, the gap becomes obvious. Those workflows assume you'll adjust and refine as you go, not that you'll spec everything perfectly upfront. The idea of exposing internal structures like plans and intermediate steps makes alot more sense than hiding everything behind a chat interface that pretends to understand exactly what you ment the first time.
Thanks Devansh! The critical importance of structure is becomming more and more evident and mainstream.
The copilot analogy really nails the problem with current agentic interfaces. When you compare it to how music producers or photgraphers work with their tools, the gap becomes obvious. Those workflows assume you'll adjust and refine as you go, not that you'll spec everything perfectly upfront. The idea of exposing internal structures like plans and intermediate steps makes alot more sense than hiding everything behind a chat interface that pretends to understand exactly what you ment the first time.
Agree. Great analogy
Great writeup. We have a new architecture and not enough people who understand how and when to develop for agents. Stuff like this is really helpful.