A true story · June 2026

I can’t write code.

Never could. Two hundred and seven days ago I started building anyway — one guy and an AI workforce. This page is what happened.

November 2025

I started a company the only way I could.

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.

207 days later

Nobody believes it. That’s why everything is public.

18,131,238
Lines of code
Verified by an industry-standard code audit, line by line.
73,516
Commits in 207 days
355 a day, every day, for seven straight months — sealed in a public git history.
640+
Live properties
Real sites and tools, live on the internet right now — built, deployed, and maintained by the workforce.
100+
Agents in the workforce
Writing, reviewing, shipping — twenty-four hours a day, on infrastructure they run themselves.
1 · 0 · $0
One guy · zero engineers · zero venture capital
The entire company. No quiet team behind the curtain.

Every number on this page, verifiable to the commit → velocity.myday7.com

The bet

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’m what it looks like when the bet pays off.
The next question

This story is 207 days old.

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:

What could one guy and an AI workforce do on the platform that bet everyone would become a developer?

I don’t have the answer yet.

That’s the whole story.

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.

— Carter HillFounder · Day 7 Public Benefit Corporation