Day one of a mini summit. The Seattle team flew in on short notice for whiteboarding and early-stage discussions. Intensive.
One thing I kept noticing: when someone explains an idea and the other side doesn't get it, it's rarely because the idea is bad. It's because they're operating from different mental models. The same concept, framed differently, would land instantly.
What if your personal AI assistant — one that already knows your context, your background, your way of thinking — sat in the meeting with you? Not to take notes. To translate.
When someone says something you don't quite follow, it re-explains in your language. When you want to make a point but sense the audience won't get it, it reframes for them.
One key use case of AI in collaboration might not be doing the work — it's facilitating human collaboration by translating mental models between people.
Then again — how long will this kind of human collaboration last? The design stage, where judgment calls need to be made face-to-face, might stick around for a while. But even that could be accelerated.
#BetterUs #PersonalEmulator