Weeknotes 320 - managing AI agents teams
Iskander Smit
Future studies at Target_is_New, founder Cities of Things Foundation, organiser ThingsCon
This is the last newsletter of 2024. I am thinking about some slight adjustments to the format of the newsletter and also thinking about the ‘ecosystem’ of the newsletter, what to publish, where, and how it all fits together. But that is something for next week.
Looking back at 2024 - as one does at the end of the year apparently - I drop some highlights here.
So, in general 2024 was a super productive year with developments of all kinds. Now bring a good balance in paid and non-paid gigs, I hope to bring that up to a healthy level in 2025 (you know how to reach me :-).
Next week it is time to have a peek into 2025.
Triggered thought
As we approach 2025, predictions for the new year are ramping up. In the AI domain, we should prepare for a year of AI agents becoming the new promise. And one of the 25 trends presented by the AI Daily Brief triggered a thought; how a new skill set is becoming essential for everyone: the ability to manage AI agents. These new agents aren't just tools; they're evolving into digital team members who require coordination, oversight, and strategic direction. This is especially true as we get dedicated agents for different tasks that combine skills to reach the goals.
It brings back a presentation (by Louise Heinrich at ThingsCon 2014 in Berlin, if I remember correctly) on conflicting IoT devices with algorithmic behavior and thresholds connected to their respective goals. Opening blinds, setting the airco, switching on the lights. What will happen when the goals are conflicting? It was a good prediction of a future that still needs to be rolled out, but with the AI agents, we might overcome the automated clashes with agents who are intelligent enough to start conversations to come to the best result.
That is the moment that managing the automated devices is not about setting the right threshold, but be sure to be clear in your personal goals. This scenario brings to mind the concept of "co-performance" introduced by Keijer and Giaccardi back in 2018, I mentioned it before in this newsletter. They envisioned a future where humans and AI systems would work together as partners, each leveraging their unique strengths. Now, as we find ourselves on the cusp of that future, their insights seem more relevant than ever.
Co-performance isn't about delegating tasks to AI and stepping back. It's about active collaboration, where we guide our AI partners towards shared goals. It requires us to understand not just what our AI agents can do, but how they can work together – and with us – most effectively.
As we navigate this new landscape, we must shift our mindset from viewing AI as mere tools to seeing them as collaborators. We need to develop skills in AI coordination, conflict resolution between agents, and strategic task allocation. In essence, we're all becoming managers in the AI era, orchestrating a team of digital assistants to enhance our daily lives and work.
The challenge—and the opportunity—lies in mastering this new form of management. By embracing co-performance principles and developing our agent-team management skills, we can create a productive partnership between human ingenuity and artificial intelligence. Enter the era of AI teamwork, where we are not a manager of the AI team but a cooperating foreman to achieve our shared goals.
Thanks for reading. I started blogging ideas and observations back in 2005 via?Targetisnew.com. Since 2015, I have started a weekly update with links to the news and reflections. I always capture news on tech and societal impact from my perspective and interest. In the last few years, it has focused on the relationship between humans and tech, particularly AI, IoT, and robotics.
The notions from the news are distributed via the weekly newsletter, archived online?here. Every week, I reflect more on one topic, a triggered thought. I share that thought here and redirect it to?my newsletter?for an overview of news, events, and more. If you need to find something from the past, use my GPT Weeknotes Archive.
If you are a new reader and wondering who is writing, I am Iskander Smit. I am educated as an industrial designer and have worked in digital technology all my life. I am particularly interested in digital-physical interactions and a focus on human-tech intelligence co-performance. I like to (critically) explore the?near future?in the context of?cities of things. And organising?ThingsCon.?I call Target_is_New my practice for making sense of unpredictable futures in human-AI partnerships. That is the lens I use to capture interesting news and share a paper every week.
Feel invited to reach out if you need some reflections; I?might be able to help out!