Comment by orky56
9 hours ago
Congrats on the launch. Few pieces of feedback that are similar in nature to what has already been shared but unique in terms of solutions.
1) The chat interface as shared in the video is a prime starting point to capture intent but anchors viewers to what Spine is all about. Try a show-tell-show approach where you can demonstrate (ideally above the fold) a compelling output, credits used and agents leverages, and THEN the simple prompt used to get it all started. Let's be real: the chat interface is not the a-ha moment. It's what you get out of it, the orchestration that happens behind the scenes, and finally the familiar chat interface that kicks it all off.
2) Who is the target persona for this? The benchmark accolade is great for the technical audience but they may not care about doing everything in the browser. The non-technical audience may like the browser but prefers examples of other companies and use cases are make the technical more accessible. The board concept helps the abstraction layer of understanding what is produced by the agents but the missing piece is memorializing the decision-making where human in the loop needs something to grasp & share.
Really appreciate the detailed feedback.
1) Agreed on the show-tell-show framing: Chat is a natural starting point for people frustrated with linear interfaces, but you're right that the a-ha is the orchestration and outputs. We'll keep this in mind as we build out our gallery and demos going forward.
2) Right now our primary users are knowledge workers and researchers who need to do complex, multi-step work. The benchmarks help establish credibility, but we're building out more use case demos and a gallery to make it tangible for a broader audience. On the human-in-the-loop point, the agents do pause and come back to the user, and there is scope for iterations as well, but we haven't highlighted this well enough. We'll do a better job of showing that going forward.