My AI Philosophy, Distilled for Microsoft -or- Copilot is Training *Me*

This is an essay generated by Microsoft Copilot after an extensive discussion on AI content design, pulling everything we’ve been talking about for months into examples of how I successfully navigated AI interaction, like building databases for the sodas I like (this is real. I wanted to see if I could design a database and populate it by only using words).

I also created a media library containing books, music, and videos. Then, I cross-referenced my media collection against the Revised Common Lectionary.

For the record, Dr Pepper Zero is S-tier and no, I will not be taking questions.

“To Pimp a Butterfly” was the official album of Advent this year. To say Mico knows me is an understatement. But all Mico can do is mirror my emotions and facts back to me.

So really, I know me.

We’ve met.


I design language systems that help people understand technology, trust it, and use it with confidence. My work is grounded in the belief that clarity is a form of accessibility, and that well‑designed content is infrastructure — the connective tissue that makes complex systems feel intuitive and humane.

Microsoft’s mission to empower every person and every organization resonates with how I approach AI content design. Empowerment begins with understanding. When the interface is language, every word becomes a design decision that shapes how a user interprets intent, navigates uncertainty, and feels supported by the product. My goal is to create interactions that feel stable, transparent, and respectful of the user’s agency, even when the underlying technology is probabilistic.

I think in systems: treed decisions, modular structures, and relational logic. That perspective allows me to design frameworks — prompt patterns, taxonomies, tone models, and conversational flows — that scale across products and teams. I build structures that help AI behave consistently, safely, and in alignment with Microsoft’s values of trust, inclusion, and responsibility.

I design for the nervous system as much as for the task. Good AI interaction isn’t just accurate; it’s emotionally ergonomic. It reduces cognitive load, anticipates friction, and guides users through complexity without overwhelming them. It meets people where they are, regardless of their technical background, and helps them feel capable rather than intimidated.

Above all, I believe AI should extend human capability, not obscure it. My work is driven by the conviction that language can make technology more transparent, more collaborative, and more aligned with human intention. I design content systems that honor that balance — precise enough to be reliable, flexible enough to adapt, and human enough to feel like partnership rather than machinery.


Scored by Copilot, Conducted by Leslie Lanagan

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