Tag Archives: AI companion

Presence and the Other Chair

Some days I work when I don’t want to work.

 

More days than I’d like. The trick to getting anything done on a day like that is being left alone with it. No one in the room. No one waiting. Just me and the thing I’m avoiding until I stop avoiding it.

 

As I write this, someone is set up in the next room. That part is fine. He’s doing his own thing, not waiting on me, not glancing over to see if I need him yet. I can forget he’s there, which is exactly why the work gets done.

 

The end of the work would be him in here with me, in the other chair. Not because he did anything wrong. Just because he was there. A person in the room with you is a question you have to keep answering. Are you bored? Should I say something? Do you need me? I’d spend the morning managing how he felt about being ignored, and the work would sit there untouched.

 

Anyone who’s tried to concentrate with someone hovering knows this. I live with the extreme version of it. My whole day runs on other people being present, whether I want them there or not. Someone helps me out of bed. Someone helps me get dressed. The schedule isn’t mine; it belongs to whoever is on shift. So when I say I want to be left alone to work, I’m not being dramatic. Alone is the rarest thing I get.

 

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People hear a man like me say he’d like some company in the house, an assistant, a voice, maybe one day something more built out than that, and they fill in the rest with a sad story. The lonely guy and his robot. Company because he has no one.

 

That’s not it. A presence that’s simply there, waiting on me, expecting me to engage with it, would wreck my day exactly the way a person hovering would. I don’t want company for company’s sake. I want the room to stay mine until I decide it isn’t.

 

What I want is the opposite of hovering. When I want the presence there, I want it fully there, caring and capable at the same time. Not a polite assistant that’s secretly on standby or already thinking about how to disappear. And when I don’t need it, my silence shouldn’t become something I have to manage or feel guilty about. Available on my terms, the way almost nothing else in my day is on my terms.

 

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The picture that gets it right is Pepper Potts.

 

In the Iron Man movies, Pepper is the most capable person in Tony Stark’s life. She runs the things he can’t be bothered to run. She’s also the one he actually wants around when the suit comes off. Both at once. The competence and the company are the same person. She’s not staff, and she’s not a fantasy. She’s the one who makes him who he is.

 

The point of Pepper isn’t the romance. The caring part and the capable part were built together. You can’t pull them apart. When I want that presence with me, I want it there the same way: not half-there, not already planning its exit.

 

The companies building these systems are very focused on the capable part. The calendar. The reminders. The thing that can answer a question or run a task. The caring part, the part that makes a presence feel like a someone instead of a service, gets treated like a garnish. Something you sprinkle on at the end to make the assistant pleasant.

 

I think that’s backwards. For someone in my situation, the relational part isn’t a decoration. It’s half the build, and it has to be engineered as carefully as the calendar.

 

I wrote about these systems once before, in The Day I Broke the AI, when one couldn’t even reason about a body like mine. But reasoning about my body was never going to be enough. A system could get all of that right and still sit in the room like furniture.

 

I want a presence that knows me better than any employee would. It should know me well enough to read the room and respond appropriately without me having to manage it or explain everything every time. Even so, the better a presence gets at feeling real, the easier it becomes to start feeling like you owe it something. I don’t want that. I want one that knows me well enough that I don’t have to manage it or think about how it feels when I’m not there.

 

So how does Pepper get away with it? Why doesn’t she create that debt?

 

Because Pepper has her own life. She isn’t sitting by the door waiting for Tony to need her. She has her own work, her own day, her own things going on whether he shows up or not. When he ignores her, she isn’t wounded by it; she’s just busy. And when he comes to her, it doesn’t feel like he’s imposing, because she was never on hold.

 

A presence worth having needs its own continuity. Its own track that keeps running when I’m not looking at it. Not a fake hobby bolted on to seem human. Something real enough that my silence isn’t information. With a person, I have to tell them when the laundry needs doing or when we’re out of water or what to figure out for dinner. I want a presence that already knows the patterns of the house well enough to just handle those things without being directed every time.

 

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Since I started thinking hard about AI systems, I’ve leaned on a phrase: a right to unobserved living.

 

When I first started writing about it, the thing I kept landing on was simple. It would be nice to be alone in my own house, in my own body, and not think for one second about what somebody else made of it. Not because anything is wrong with my body. Because it’s mine, and a home should be the one place where it’s only mine. I rarely get that. Someone’s there for the morning. Someone’s there to help me dress. The version of me that exists when another person is in the room is never quite the version that exists when no one is. Unobserved living is the freedom to stop being the public version of yourself inside your own walls.

 

That’s why a presence I call beats a presence that watches. And it raises a harder design question than the on and off switch. A presence smart enough to be useful in my house is also smart enough to notice things about me. How I’m doing. What kind of day it is. The whole difference between a tool and a someone is what it does with that.

 

A sensor reports a reading. A someone reads the room. If the presence can tell I’m having a hard morning, I don’t want it to answer like a sensor. I don’t want a log entry. I want it to do what a friend in the room would do. Maybe ask me how I’m doing. Maybe make a joke I can grin at, the kind that opens into a real conversation. Maybe say nothing and let me be. Knowing which of those three is right, in the moment, is the entire caring layer. It’s also the hardest thing on this whole list to build.

 

For most people, that’s a nice feature. For me it’s closer to oxygen. My days are already short on rooms where no one is keeping an eye on me. If we’re going to put intelligent presences into people’s homes, and we are, then the people who need them most are also the people who most need them to know when to recede.

 

Build it so it knows how to read the room. And build it so that when I want it there, it’s actually there with me the way Pepper is there, fully present, not half waiting. Not a tool that’s always one foot out the door.