Eno Reyes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Okay, now take that draft or take that outline and expand.
Let's start with chapter one.
It's a very like, I go straight to the artifact, right?
Like, I just want to go and create the piece of writing.
My view is that you should take inspiration from like the Tolkien side of things, right?
Like build the world with the agent, right?
So you have a folder that's just like all of the things that matter.
I'm going to take a fiction approach because I think it's easier, but you could easily apply to nonfiction as well, like research or something.
Yeah, you know, you have a folder that's like, here's the world, right?
You have a folder that's like, here's the characters, here's build their personalities, how would they interact with each other?
Right?
Here's the third folder, which is the the research into what is the exact sort of like, nitty gritty details of this world that we're building, you know, the fourth is the outline, right?
And so you take all of this context
And then the thing that you're writing suddenly has very dense information from many sources that you're sort of in alignment with.
And the writing will become higher quality because in its context, it always knows these like pieces of information.
So what I've seen is a lot of writers will use, you know, agentic software development tooling to basically build out tons of ephemeral content.
Yeah, exactly.
And then they write and execute the document and whatever strategy they find, they find apt.
So there are several things that go into making an agent ready code base.
But generally the way I think about this is everyone has a very clear idea of what they sort of want to do in the future.