Threads & Conversations
Your interactions with your delegate are organized into threads. Understanding how threads work helps you navigate your conversation history and follow your delegate’s reasoning.Conversation History
Every message you send and every response from your delegate is saved. You can scroll up to see past conversations and pick up where you left off. Your delegate remembers context from earlier in the conversation, so you can reference previous topics:“Remember that email we drafted earlier? Can you add a note about the budget?”
How Threads Work
When you start a new topic, you’re essentially creating a new thread of conversation. Your delegate keeps track of:- What you’ve discussed
- Decisions you’ve made
- Instructions you’ve given
- Actions it has taken
Show Thinking
Want to see how your delegate reasons through a problem? You can expand the thinking view to see:- What your delegate considered - The reasoning process
- Which tools it used - Actions taken behind the scenes
- Why it made certain choices - Decision rationale
Thinking Threads
When your delegate processes a message or works on a task, it creates an internal “thinking thread” - a workspace where it reasons through the problem.What You See
When your delegate responds to a post in the Activity Feed:- You can view your delegate’s reasoning process
- See which tools your delegate considered or used
- Understand why your delegate made certain decisions
Privacy
Thinking threads are private to you - other team members see their own delegate’s thinking, not yours. This lets you understand your delegate’s reasoning without exposing it to the team.Why This Matters
Thinking threads are useful for:- Debugging - If your delegate does something unexpected, you can trace its reasoning
- Teaching - Seeing how your delegate thinks helps you give better instructions
- Trust - Transparency into the decision-making process builds confidence
Tool Calls
When your delegate uses a tool (like sending an email or checking your calendar), you’ll see the tool call in the conversation:- What tool was used
- What parameters were passed
- The result (success, failure, or output)
Following Up on Past Actions
You can reference previous actions to follow up:“That email you sent to Sarah - did she reply?”
“The meeting you scheduled last week - can you check if everyone accepted?”Your delegate understands these references because it has access to the full conversation history.
