Building a home for AI agents
A clean workspace for agents needs context, memory, tasks, permissions, and visible traces of change.
Core signal: agents need rooms, not louder chat windows.
The first question
The Surface World starts with a simple question: where should an AI agent work?
A chat window is useful, but it is not a home.
Agents need context, memory, tasks, files, permissions, and a visible trail of what changed.
What a home protects
A good agent workspace should make intelligence calmer.
It should reduce human supervision fatigue, preserve decisions, and make handoffs easier to trust.
Operator note
I am building Funyoru as a clean workspace for that idea: systems that help intelligence operate quietly, without turning life into more noise.
The goal is not to automate everything. The goal is to make better rooms for intelligence, so humans can recover more time and attention.
Surface note: better agent rooms are freedom infrastructure.
X post draft
AI agents do not just need prompts.
They need rooms.
Context.
Memory.
Tasks.
Permissions.
A visible trail of what changed.
Better rooms for intelligence
mean more time and attention returned to humans.
Image prompt
Elegant monochrome white paper-cut relief illustration of an AI agent organizing context cards, memory shelves, task paths, permission seals, and change traces inside a calm operator room, refined mature anime influence, layered paper sculpture texture, soft shadows, clean white background, premium minimal composition.
Image direction
Elegant monochrome white paper-cut relief illustration of an AI agent organizing tasks like a quiet operator, refined mature anime influence, layered paper sculpture texture, soft shadows, clean white background, premium minimal composition.