The Human Layer
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2460445/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Human Layer, Crystal and Taylor sit down at the Regen Hub [https://regenhub.xyz/] in Boulder with Neil [https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilyarnal/], a sign-painter-turned-creative-director, and Jon [https://jon.bo/], a software engineer ten years deep in startup work. What unfolds is less a conversation about AI than a live demonstration of four different operating systems negotiating coherence in real time each with their own relationship to flow, identity, and the particular vertigo of mid-2026. The conversation moves through the question of whether AI flow is the same as painting flow or photography flow (it isn't, exactly — and the difference matters), why the antidote to AI psychosis at scale is almost certainly hyperlocal community, and what it means that the most extractive frontier models are the ones least capable of telling you "I don't know." Neil's "let's blow the bloody doors off" energy meets Crystal's nervous-system literacy meets Jon's ground-truth pragmatism meets Taylor's contrarian curiosity, and the room keeps finding the third frame underneath every binary the moment offers. By the back half, the four of them are stacking on each other rather than counter-pointing — landing on a definition of operating systems that has very little to do with productivity and everything to do with sovereignty: a translation membrane that encodes what would otherwise require your continuous presence, and then sets the recipient free from needing you. The metric of a good OS, it turns out, isn't how well it scales you. It's how cleanly it makes you optional. Support the show [https://cash.app/$cstreetstudios] Be sure to follow The Human Layer's signals on Substack [https://humanlayer.substack.com/] to stay in the loop!
14 episodios
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