Looking back, I don't think the biggest change has been AI itself. I think it's been the way I've started interacting with it. When I first began using AI I'd usually wait until I was completely stuck before opening it. Somewhere along the way that changed. Now it's often part of the process long before I have an answer, or sometimes before I've even figured out the right question to ask. I didn't decide to build that habit. It just happened. That's what made me curious enough to spend some time looking into OpenGradient $OPG What caught my attention wasn't another discussion about making AI more capable. After spending some time with OpenGradient Chat I realized I wasn't comparing it to other tools by asking which one gave the smartest response. I kept noticing whether the interaction felt natural enough that I could stay focused on what I was doing instead of thinking about the tool itself. That felt like a different way of looking at AI. Maybe that's what happens as these systems become more familiar. The conversation slowly shifts away from impressive features and toward how comfortably AI fits into the way people already work, learn and explore ideas. I'm not sure where that leads. I just don't think the relationship people have with AI today is the same one they had a year ago. $OPG @OpenGradient #OPG