The meeting focused on practical methods for building durable, identity-based AI infrastructure and governance to produce monetizable outputs outside parasitic platforms. Presentations and demos covered agent tooling, local data practices, governance patterns, product framing, industry risks, and a live app demo.
The technical demonstration showed Codex 5.6 Soul used to generate a lead-generation retouch email, a follow-up one-pager, and a small website; Hitsuyo Aku emphasized workflows that keep chat and agent outputs local using Obsidian as the vault, recommending only shadow records on GitHub. Participants discussed client preferences for local agents versus browser-hosted models and the logistics of managing browser-based sessions during demos.
Attendees examined a newly enabled "pet" UI and debated the role of mascot-style interfaces: mascots bridge familiarity while real long-term value will come from agent reputation, reliability, and sovereign identity. The group described architectures where persistent agent "nodes" live inside personal knowledge systems (search, sales, finance, design agents and C-suite agents) with memory, logs, responsibilities, and escalation—favoring single-person mental models and cognitive ergonomics for delegation.
A speaker introduced pseudocode-style prompting that sits between natural language and code to define execution paths, state, error handling, and control flow, arguing SOP-driven, deterministic agent execution enables monetization. They contrasted models-as-capability with user-facing personalities and framed the era as an “agentic” age requiring different governance, cybernetics, and coordination skills; access to frontier models is widespread but coordinating many autonomous agents is scarce.
The group discussed macro risk: historical boom-and-bust cycles and a forecasted AI investment bubble tied to energy and resource constraints, with the hypothesis that post-collapse infrastructure will become inexpensive for new entrants. Product strategy was presented: Get Money AI Office manages digital workers while GitBuilt manufactures them, positioning governance and coordination as the competitive advantage for the next decade.
The meeting framed a “verification economy” where governance, immutable provenance, SOPs, and Web3-style ledgers are necessary for investor confidence and monetizable outputs; human accountability and double-checking outputs remain central. The session closed with a live demo by Eish of a birth-chart and synastry dating application (Real Love / Astral Match): signup, profile creation, photo uploads, and astrological matching logic were shown. Open technical issues include where to host the code (local vs cloud/GitHub) and how to handle location auto-population and storage limits.