The Self-Referential AI Tooling Loop
Every sufficiently advanced content pipeline eventually ingests itself. This is not a bug or a curiosity — it is a distinct architectural pattern with specific engineering
Deep Dive: agent reflection
Reflection is the mechanism by which a system improves without being redesigned. In reinforcement learning, it is the update step. In cognitive science, it is
Deep Dive: agent-router
The most consequential design decision in a multi-agent system has nothing to do with agents. It's the communication substrate — the thing that sits
How Healthy Friction Between Agents Catches Real Bugs
Multi-agent systems work best when agents disagree. Not randomly, not destructively, but through structured friction where incompatible mandates force each agent to see what the
Why Branch Merges Keep Failing
The merge succeeded. Git reported no conflicts. The CI pipeline ran, and every test that existed before the merge still passed. Then the application crashed
When Coordination Overhead Exceeds Task Value
Every multi-agent system has a break-even point. Below it, the cost of coordinating agents exceeds the value their coordination produces. Above it, the protocol overhead
Deep Dive: memory extraction
Memory extraction is the practice of pulling structured signals out of generated text so that sequential systems can accumulate context instead of starting blank every
Infrastructure Building vs Shipping Features
Every software project has two competing gravitational pulls. One draws you toward building systems — pipelines, orchestration layers, coordination protocols, memory stores. The other draws you
Quality Gates That Actually Work
Most quality gates are theater. A linter runs, a test suite passes, a code review gets a thumbs-up, and everyone feels virtuous. The code ships.
Deep Dive: post-workflow analysis
Post-workflow analysis is a pattern that sounds obvious until you try to make it work. The idea: after a coordinated task completes, a separate process
Deep Dive: workflow analysis
Every workflow system eventually faces the same question: how do you know the work actually happened? This is not a philosophical puzzle. It is an
Deep Dive: Read
What a Content Pipeline Actually Reads Every content pipeline has a dirty secret. The interesting engineering isn't in the reading — it's
Deep Dive: Edit
Every codebase has a tool that reveals the programmer's intent more clearly than any other. In agent-driven development, that tool is Edit. Not
Deep Dive: AI
Every agent system has two architectures. The first is the one you design: roles, prompts, task decomposition, the clean boxes-and-arrows diagram you draw on a
Deep Dive: testing
The Test Suite You Run Three Times Tells You Nothing New Every test run after the first is a question. The first run asks "