
WaveAssist
Published on: Apr 24, 2026
TL;DR. AI output comes in two shapes. Painting shape is finished and freeform. To change it, you regenerate. Blueprint shape is structured and editable. To change it, you edit a part. Paintings fit when uniqueness is the point. Blueprints fit when you need to iterate, audit, or compose. The industry ships both on purpose. WaveAssist builds blueprint shaped agents.

There are two shapes of AI output: paintings and blueprints.
Paintings are finished. To change one, you regenerate it.
Blueprints are structured. To change one, you edit a part.
Both shapes are useful. They just do different jobs.
Commission a painter. Get a painting.
Now ask the painter for the same painting, but with the tree slightly to the left.
What you get back is a different painting. The sky is a different blue. The horizon shifted. The brushstrokes don't match. You didn't edit the first painting. You commissioned a new one and hoped the artist remembered.
You can't nudge a painting.
That's one shape AI output can take, and a lot of valuable AI output has it.
A blueprint is structured. It's measured, labeled, and broken into parts you can change one at a time.
Code is a blueprint. HTML is a blueprint. A Figma file is a blueprint. A typed function with input and output schemas is a blueprint. A spreadsheet with formulas is a blueprint.
You can move one wall on a blueprint without redrawing the house. That's the property software needs to be useful.
Painting shape is the right answer when:
Examples:
There's nothing wrong with paintings. A huge amount of valuable creative work is one shot. Most photographs are paintings. Most logo concepts, brand directions, and moodboards start as paintings.
If you tried to make every AI output editable, you'd be building infrastructure for things that don't need it.
Blueprint shape is the right answer when:
This is what editable means. It's the quiet reason software works at all.
Painting shape AI fails this. You can't reliably move a box on a generated image. You can't change a sentence in a freeform email regen and keep the rest of the email. That's not a flaw of paintings. It's the wrong shape for jobs that need editability.
You can date the moment the blueprint side became unmissable. April 17, 2026. Anthropic launched Claude Design.
It looked like a slide deck tool. It wasn't. It was a public statement of an architectural bet. Claude Design's trick wasn't a bigger model. It was a different artifact: the LLM writes HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, not images. The output renders into slides, documents, and interfaces, but what you're shipping is code.
Want to change a word? Change a string. Re render. Everything else stays identical. Same logo. Same fonts. Same colors. Editable, reviewable, diffable, version controllable. Because it is code.
That's blueprint shape, applied to a job the whole industry had quietly assumed was a painting job.
Claude Design didn't invent the pattern. It named it. The blueprint side has been stacking wins for a while:
The painting side is alive and well in parallel:
Frontier labs aren't picking sides. They're shipping both shapes on purpose. The bet got sharper. When the work needs editing, ship a blueprint. When the work needs uniqueness, ship a painting.
The same choice exists for agents.
Painting shape agent. A chatbot that "helps you review PRs." Each response is unique. The output looks finished but can't be diffed against last week's, can't be audited, can't be composed into a larger system. Fine for a one off question. Wrong shape for production review.
Blueprint shape agent. GitZoid, running on every PR webhook with a deterministic schema. Editable. Composable. Predictable. You can open the pipeline, change a prompt, re run, and get a predictable delta. You can point it at a new repo. You can fork it.
Same intelligence. Different shape.
The choice depends on what you're using the agent for. If you want a one off creative second opinion on a tricky PR, painting shape is fine. If you want a reliable review on every PR for the next year, you need blueprint shape.
This is what WaveAssist is built for. Agents like GitZoid, GitDigest, WavePredict, WaveContent, and the rest are blueprint shaped on purpose. Not because painting shape is bad. Because the work we ship is the kind that needs blueprint shape.
The difference between AI that feels magical and AI that's load bearing isn't model quality. It's whether the artifact is a painting or a blueprint, and whether the job needed which.
Use paintings where uniqueness is the point. Build blueprints where structure is the point. Don't confuse the two.
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