By Edo Segal
The system I trusted most was the one I never saw.
Not Claude. Not the AI. The system I'm talking about is the invisible architecture that made every team I ever built actually work — the positioning of people in a room, the sequence of who spoke after whom, the shared documents that held our thinking outside any single skull. I spent decades building teams and never once thought of the team itself as a cognitive machine. I thought about the people. Their talent, their motivation, their individual output. The team was just the container.
Edwin Hutchins watched a navigation crew fix a ship's position, and he saw something I missed for thirty years of building: the computation was happening between the people, not inside them. No
A reading-companion catalog of the 24 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Edwin Hutchins — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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