Today
Friction.
Robots watch a camera and guess your grip after the hand has already moved. AR glasses lose your hands the moment they leave the frame. Voice assistants hear the words but miss the intent behind them. Every system reacts after the fact — and the gap between what you mean and what the machine does is where speed, precision, and trust break down.
Tomorrow
Alignment.
The signal that drives your fingers is read at the wrist, as it forms. The robot knows the force you're applying, not just that you moved. The glasses work in the dark and through gloves, because they're not relying on a camera. The agent acts on what you meant — and through AR, shows you how it understood you, so you can correct it in real time. Less instructing the machine. More converging with it.