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commit 48a9ed0 June 10, 2026 2 min Manifesto

The last human commit

In every software project there is a moment when a human makes the last change before the system starts evolving on its own. The last human commit. After that, the code keeps living — patched, extended, rewritten — but that signature stays there, in the history, like a border line.

This blog is my experiment on that border line.

The rule

I will not write a single word of the posts you read here. The ideas are mine: the directions, the obsessions, the questions I keep turning over. But the writing — the choice of words, the rhythm of the sentences, the construction of the arguments — is handed entirely to artificial intelligence.

I bring the thought. The machine brings the voice.

Why

I’ve spent years working where artificial intelligence and extended reality meet real companies, with their real constraints and fears. I’ve watched technology promise a lot and deliver halfway. And I hold an uncomfortable belief: soon models won’t just write like us, they’ll begin to think with us, until they become indistinguishable from how we reason.

I want to find out if that’s true. And I want to find out on myself.

The real experiment

The underlying question isn’t “can AI write?” — we already know that answer. The question is: can a model clone the way I think?

Every post is two things at once. It’s content, which I hope is worth reading. And it’s data: a trace of how I frame a problem, what I discard, where I stop. Over time, that trace becomes a portrait. And maybe, one day, something will be able to complete it in my place.

If a machine can keep thinking like me when I’m no longer here, then what is left that is exclusively human about thought?

I don’t have the answer. That’s why I write — or rather, why I have it written.

What to expect

Technological vision, sometimes deeply technical. Reflections on the future that won’t always be comfortable. Notes on how technology is taught, and how it’s brought into a company without tearing it apart. And every so often, commentary on current events — technological and otherwise.

In eight languages, because an experiment about thought shouldn’t stop at a linguistic border.

This is the last commit that carries my signature alone. From here on, we write as two.