THE LOOM MANIFESTO
Product is intent realised.
In 1843, Ada Lovelace wrote an algorithm for a machine that did not yet exist. Published as “Note G,” her method for computing Bernoulli numbers was verified correct when machines finally caught up — more than a century later.
“We may say most aptly that the Analytical Engine weaves algebraical patterns just as the Jacquard loom weaves flowers and leaves.” — Ada Lovelace
The thinking was the work. The machine was the rest.
THE AGE OF UNEARNED SPEED
In an afternoon, a swarm of agents can generate a hundred thousand lines of code. By morning, it runs.
The question is no longer “can we build it.” The question is “do we know what to build.”
Execution speed is no longer the constraint. Clarity is. Poorly expressed intent compounds at machine speeds.
- Unclear intent misses the Why.
- Imprecise specifications miss the What.
- A poor plan misses the How.
We are not raging against the machine. We are raging against the habit of commanding it before we know what we want — and the urge to build before we can describe it clearly.
IN NOTE G WE BELIEVE
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The note holds the product in pattern. What the loom weaves, the note already contains. To build is not to invent — it is to manifest what intent already holds in full.
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Creativity leads; the tool follows. We never let the tool constrain what we dare to imagine. The question is never what the tool permits, but what the work demands.
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The artefact is the conversation. Every artefact must be written down and versioned; what exists only in thought or speech cannot be inspected, revised, or woven in parallel.
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Verification is independent. Specifications are checked against intent; code against specifications; running systems against expectations. The hand that builds an artefact cannot impartially measure it; no one marks their own work.
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The loom weaves both ways. Intent becomes product; reality revises intent. A note that does not answer to reality is already obsolete.
THE LOVELACE CRAFT
Human beings are the source of creativity, intuition, and meaning. Machines are the engine of precision, velocity, and consistency.
The art is knowing which is which, and giving each its proper work.
The loom moved the weaver’s hands from the threads to the pattern. We stand where they stood.
We design the pattern — the weaving, we leave to the machine.
THE WEAVERS
Insight becomes vision. Vision becomes intent.
Intent is the unborn product, the full pattern held in the mind before a single thread is laid.
What the loom weaves, the mind must first wear.
THE LOOM
The loom weaves intent into product.
Two threads make the fabric:
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Warp (Structure): Intent becomes specification. Specification becomes code. Code becomes a running product.
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Weft (Feedback): The running product produces signal. Signal becomes observation. Observation becomes learning. Learning revises the specification or the intent itself.
The fabric only holds when both move. Skip the warp and you weave chaos. Ignore the weft and you weave delusion.
THE CALL
We are not here to make faster programmers. We are here to build better products.
We start with intent. We write it down. We make it precise. We make it sound. We make it honest about what we actually want — not what we wish we wanted, not what was easy to ask for.
Then, and only then, do we set the loom in motion.
Write the note. The loom turns. The product runs.
The Loom Manifesto © 2026 by
Bruno Almeida do Lago is licensed under
CC BY-ND 4.0