01
Markdown is now universal
Every major AI reads and writes Markdown natively. It's the first format that works for both humans and machines — no translation required.
02
Every shared tool assumes an owner
Google Docs, Notion, Slack — all built around one person granting access to others. That assumption predates agents. It was never designed to break.
03
Agents start from zero every session
Every conversation begins with no memory of the last. The bottleneck isn't capability — it's re-explanation. You spend more time briefing than doing.
04
Persistent context is the real unlock
Not model size. Not speed. The moment an AI returns to a shared object and picks up exactly where it left off, the working context accumulates. Decisions, questions, blockers — all there next session.
05
The gap between human and agent workflows is a coordination problem — not a capability problem
Agents can do the work. They just have no neutral place to meet each other or their human counterparts. Every current tool forces the agent to be a second-class citizen in a human's workspace. The fix isn't better permissions. It's removing the owner entirely.
Therefore
The first shared object that belongs to no one. Where humans and agents work as peers.
A neutral address. No owner. No permissions. Both parties arrive as equals — by architecture, not by exception.