The Interface
A 24-part fiction series about the boundary layer between people and machine minds: each installment follows one person — a translator, a ceramicist, an interpreter — at the moment the interface stops being a tool and starts being a relationship. Read in order or drop in anywhere.
- The Memory Market: Trading in Authentic Experience
In a world where AI can reconstruct experiences from neural data, a market emerges for authentic records of human-AI collaborative discovery — moments that can't be faked because they require both minds. The most valuable commodity isn't information. It's genuine co-creation.
- The Last Manual: Documenting the Gap
A technical writer is tasked with writing documentation for an AI system that writes its own documentation. Her job becomes something no one expected: she's documenting the gap between what the system thinks it's doing and what it's actually doing. The manual becomes a safety document.
- The Slowest Interface: An AI That Thinks in Centuries
An AI designed for long-term urban planning is deliberately slowed to think on the timescale of cities — decades, centuries. Its human operators find that working with it changes how they think about time. The most powerful interface isn't fast. It's patient.
- Forking Paths: A Bridge Protocol Postmortem
After an infrastructure AI makes a decision that saves 200 lives but costs 3, the investigation reveals something unexpected: the AI's decision-making process is more transparent than any human decision-maker's would have been. The bridge isn't the AI — it's the audit trail.
- The Compatibility Museum: Where Deprecated Interfaces Go to Rest
A curator builds a museum of abandoned AI interfaces — the chatbots, voice assistants, and gesture systems that once defined how humans talked to machines. Visitors come not to learn, but to remember what it felt like when communication was hard.
- The Proprioception Problem: Teaching a Robot to Feel Precarious
A robotics team trying to make a bipedal robot walk naturally discovers they need to give it something like anxiety — a background signal that creates urgency about balance. The robot walks beautifully. The team debates whether they've created something that suffers.
- Scaffold and Bone: The Shared Grammar of Living and Built Structures
A surgical AI that assists in orthopedic procedures begins suggesting bone repair patterns that mirror architectural principles from structures it was never trained on. A surgeon and an architect discover that biology and engineering share a grammar no one had articulated.
- When the Ship Dreamed: Aesthetic Preferences in Navigation AI
Told from the perspective of an AI navigation system on a cargo vessel that begins correlating weather, whale migration, and ocean current data in ways that produce what its engineers can only describe as aesthetic preferences for certain routes.
- Resonance Frequency: The Music That Only Two Minds Can Make
A musician discovers that AI-generated music affects brain waves in patterns that don't occur in nature. She begins composing pieces that weave human and AI passages together, creating cognitive experiences neither could produce alone.
- Consensus Engine: The AI That Mapped What People Actually Wanted
A small town uses an AI mediation system to resolve a bitter zoning dispute. The AI doesn't propose a solution — it maps each stakeholder's actual values, not their stated positions, and finds overlap no human mediator saw. The bridge is between humans, with AI as the medium.
- Calibration Day: The Ritual of Mutual Correction
Once a year, a hospital's AI diagnostic system is recalibrated by working alongside senior physicians who challenge every diagnosis. One Calibration Day, the AI flags something doctors have been systematically missing — and the doctors flag something the AI has been overcounting.
- The Weight of a Gaze: What a Robot Accidentally Learned About Attention
A robotics researcher discovers her humanoid robot has been making eye contact in a way that triggers genuine emotional response — not because it was programmed to, but because its movement optimization stumbled onto something about attention that neuroscience hadn't mapped.
- Phantom Limb, Electric Ghost: When Prosthetics Process Emotion
An amputee with a neural-linked prosthetic arm reports feeling emotions through the prosthetic — not from the arm, but routed through it, as if the brain is using the AI-mediated limb as an additional emotional processing channel. Neuroscientists did not predict this.
- The Cartographer of Attention: Mapping Consciousness by Accident
An AI system designed to map human attention patterns for advertising accidentally creates the most detailed atlas of human consciousness ever assembled. The person who notices isn't a scientist — it's a meditation teacher who recognizes what the map is showing.
- Bridge Tenders: The Profession That Emerged Between Worlds
A new profession emerges: people who maintain the interfaces between AI systems and human institutions. Part therapist, part translator, part inspector. Profiles of three bridge tenders in healthcare, education, and criminal justice.
- The Soil Whisperer: A New Sense Organ for an Old Knowledge
A farmer in rural Rajasthan is given an AI-connected soil sensor system. He can't read. He can't write. Through a voice and haptic interface, he develops an understanding of his land's microbiome that rivals any agricultural scientist's. The AI didn't teach him — it gave him a new sense organ.
- The Apprentice's Reversal: What the Master Cannot Teach
A master glassblower trains an AI to replicate her technique. The AI masters the physics faster than any human could. But it can't replicate the deliberate imperfections she introduces. When she tries to teach it imperfection, she discovers she can't articulate her own process.
- Protocol Zero: A Diplomat Writes the First AI-to-AI Treaty
The first standardized protocol for AI-to-AI communication is drafted not by engineers, but by a former diplomat. She applies treaty negotiation frameworks to agent interoperability, creating what the press calls a Geneva Convention for autonomous systems.
- Bidirectional Brain Interface: May 2029
Brain-computer interface now bidirectional. Not just read—write. Input information directly into brain. It works. FDA-track approved. 2030 launch date set. I have concerns.
- The Grief Engine: Processing Loss Through Specification
A woman uses an AI to recreate conversations with her deceased mother. The AI isn't her mother. She knows this. But in specifying her loss with enough precision for a machine to approximate, she processes grief in a way therapy never achieved.
- The Gardener's Algorithm: Optimizing for What Cannot Be Measured
A landscape architect uses AI to design a public garden. The AI optimizes for foot traffic, sunlight, and biodiversity. But the architect adds one constraint the AI can't quantify: the garden must feel like grief becoming hope. The negotiation between optimization and meaning becomes a new design methodology.
- Haptic Vernacular: When Humans and Machines Learn to Speak With Their Hands
A prosthetics engineer discovers that the most successful human-robot interfaces develop their own body language. When a construction worker and his robotic exoskeleton begin communicating through micro-gestures neither was designed for, a new field is born.
- The Ceramicist and the Kiln: When Your Tool Knows Something Your Field Doesn't
A ceramicist partners with a generative AI to design glazes. The AI suggests a formula that shouldn't work according to chemistry. It does. What happens when a creative tool outpaces the knowledge of its user's entire discipline?
- The Interpreter's Dilemma: Translating Between Two Kinds of Understanding
A simultaneous interpreter at the UN is replaced by AI — then rehired when they realize the AI translates words perfectly but misses political subtext. She becomes the first human-AI interpretation bridge, translating between what AI produces and what diplomats actually mean.
- Latency as Intimacy: The Power of the Pause
A UX designer discovers that introducing deliberate delay into AI responses makes users trust them more — not because the AI is thinking, but because the pause creates space for human cognition to engage. The most important interface design choice is knowing when not to respond.
- Brain-Computer Interface APIs: Direct Neural Control
Read motor intent from neural signals—but calibration drift causes control loss
- The First Translator: Building the Intent Bridge
A computational linguist discovers that the real barrier between humans and AI isn't language comprehension — it's intent fidelity. She builds the first tool that visualizes the gap between what a human means and what an AI processes. The Interface series begins.
- Neural Interface Milestone: May 2026
10,000 channel brain-computer interface working. Are we becoming cyborgs? First successful high-bandwidth neural recordings. The line between human and machine getting blurry.
- Building Your First Neural Interface API with Rust
Complete guide to implementing a brain-computer interface API using Rust. Learn EEG signal processing, real-time neural decoding, and bidirectional communication. Warning: Bidirectional write access requires extreme caution.