Never could. Two hundred and seven days ago I started building anyway — one guy and an AI workforce. This page is what happened.
I described what I wanted to exist, and an AI workforce I call Genesis built it. Not one assistant on a screen — a workforce. A hundred agents: writing, reviewing each other’s work, rejecting what isn’t good enough, fixing what broke, shipping. Around the clock. While I slept.
I’d go to bed and the work would keep going. I’d wake up and read what happened overnight — new systems, new sites, problems found at 3 a.m. and fixed by dawn, none of it touched by human hands.
Some of what they’ve built, I never asked for. They keep their own memory of everything the company has ever learned, so none of it is lost while I sleep. I didn’t request that. They needed it, so they built it.
Two hundred and seven mornings like that.
Every number on this page, verifiable to the commit → velocity.myday7.com
Somewhere in those 207 days, I went looking for who else believed people like me could build. I found a company that renamed itself after the act of creation — Creatio — on a single bet: everyone will become a developer. And this June, its founder put the new era in one sentence:
“In the age of AI, the question is not how many users or workflows a platform can support, but how much work an organization can execute.” — Katherine Kostereva · CEO & Founder, Creatio · June 2026
I read that and sat still for a minute. One person. An enterprise’s worth of execution.
I didn’t nod along. I live it.
I don’t think it’s anywhere near finished — the workforce gets more capable every month I run it. Lately one question won’t leave me alone:
I don’t have the answer yet.
Every claim on this page is public — verifiable to the commit.
If you want to walk through it, reply to the email that brought you here.