The Minas Tirith operating model, the cockpit plan, and the build sheet — re-read through one lens: Ali is away doing marketing, and the machine must keep shipping without him.
If Ali disappears into marketing for two weeks, does the machine keep shipping — and if it quietly stops, does anyone find out? The plans are strong on transition mechanics but none of them treats "Ali becomes unreachable" as the condition that should reorder their own priorities. Five gaps could stop the machine silently; all are cheap to close before departure.
Ali at the laptop, opening Claude Code daily, reviewing each phase, noticing when a dashboard goes red, cleaning a full disk, un-sticking a merge queue by hand.
Ali on the road for weeks. A phone browser and Slack. Fifteen pulled minutes a day. Every failure that needs "someone will notice" must notice itself.
The three plans are strong, and the last 24 hours fixed their two riskiest parts — Donna's Jessica-stays decision removed the org-surgery steps, and her board-map closed the orphaned-work problem. But all three were written for "Ali supervises from the laptop," not "Ali is gone." Read through the away-mode lens, there are 5 gaps that could silently stop the machine, 4 pieces of work with no owner or no rule, and 5 optimizations — none hard, all cheap relative to what they protect.
An independent adversarial review pass (separate agent, same evidence) reached the same top four gaps unprompted and added two of the findings below. Its verdict matches this one: none of the three docs treats "Ali becomes unreachable" as the trigger that should reorder their own priorities.
The two biggest findings: the whole cross-model design rests on Claude actually running on the VDS — never proven there — and every safety mechanism in the org is downstream of Donna's one process staying alive, which nothing currently watches. Everything else is sequencing.
Your directive: Sonnet 5 leads for curriculum + marketing, and a Claude↔Codex verifier pair in every team. But the June handover explicitly ran with no Claude tokens ("Codex/gpt-5.5 builds"), Hermes's Claude-subscription auth is broken upstream, and headless Claude auth has failed before. If the org flips on and the Claude seats silently can't authenticate, every content lane and every verification gate degrades — and per the no-pings posture, nobody tells you.
Donna's gateway is one process on the VDS. If it dies (or the VDS reboots), the entire executive layer stops — routing, verification, escalation, the digest — and the no-pings rule means silence looks identical to health. Two weeks of quiet could be two weeks of nothing.
Every directive routes through it — Needs-Ali, idle teams, escalations, spend, hard-stops, preview URLs. Away from the laptop, the dashboard IS your job interface, and it must be mobile-first. It's spec'd (AIOPS-216) but not built; meanwhile Donna already proved the pattern by publishing her board-map to a mobile review page.
The June board stall was a merge deadlock — conflict-stacked PRs, branch protection needing admin, no merge train. Frodo now owns merge/PR, but his actual GitHub permissions, Mergify path, and branch-protection compatibility have never been exercised. If Frodo can't actually merge, teams keep "finishing" work that never lands — false-done at org scale, precisely while you're not looking.
/lesson chat-first shell, ACAD-137) is open and dirty against main.The nightly PKM pipeline — the memory the whole "search PKM/docs first before pinging Ali" policy leans on — runs only when your Mac is awake, and the disk is at 86% with ~2GB free. If the Mac fills up or sleeps for a week while you travel, the org's context quietly goes stale; retrieval failures then turn into either bad guesses or Ali-pings, the two things the policy exists to prevent.
The live COO agent (a 10th top-level agent dispatching build lanes via a file-marker — the exact external scaffolding you want gone) was going to be retired as part of "retire Jessica." That step was cancelled, but the COO wasn't — it's still live, still dispatching, and now nobody owns removing it. A file-marker dispatcher racing Jessica's router is the same uncontrolled-concurrency shape that caused the June repair-cascade failure.
The operating model's best section (per-head MEMORY.md, weekly distill, FTS5 recall, LLM-Wiki for domain heads) is a real build — the memory dirs are empty today — and it's gated on three decisions still sitting with you from the agent-memory study: go/no-go on wiring PKM reach, Gandalf-vs-Finch as owner, and which memory tiers to build.
Your guardrail replaced budget caps — but the mechanics aren't attached yet: 0 of 7 routines fire, no task-watchdogs are attached, and the two cheap known gaps from June 29 (per-run iteration caps, trigger sweep) are still open.
The Guard-tier map is static — Gimli/Éowyn cover Engineering, Sauron's team covers Security, and so on. But real lanes cross departments (an engineering change touching auth code is the classic case). Today it's undefined which watchdog fires when a lane's actual blast radius doesn't match the department it was filed under — maybe both, maybe neither.
The current cut (statusline, PreCompact, prompt-scaffold…) assumes you're in terminal sessions daily; the build sheet even gates on "say go and review behavior." Both plans compete for the same scarce resource — your pre-departure attention — and the org-safety items must win: your last hands-on sessions go to the two canaries, the dead-man switch, the pull surface, and Frodo's first real merge — not cockpit polish. Within the cockpit itself, U2 (automations + disk-guard) and U14 (AgentsView weekly digest) jump up — they protect the unattended Mac and reach you where you are; statusline and prompt-scaffold only pay off when you're in a session. Keep U15 (PreCompact backstop) high. And the plan's 11 open decisions all have sane recommended defaults — adopt them wholesale (all reversible config) instead of leaving a decision queue on the person who's leaving.
It's the one document a cold agent would read and get wrong: the manifest-corruption landmine turned out false, three sections still say "retire Jessica / new Donna record," Security says Théoden not Sauron, and Donna's budget-policy ask is superseded by no-budget. The execution plan shrinks from 11 steps to ~6. Worth an hour before anyone treats it as reference.
Your directives live across ~8 Linear comments plus four charter docs. For an org whose prime rule is "search before asking," the CEO charter should be ONE searchable document — which is exactly what Donna asked for. Finch compiles; comments become history.
Tokens and quotas expire on their own schedule (Claude's interactive-only auth, Cloudflare, GitHub, the Vertex 429 history). One cheap daily routine checks each critical credential and surfaces days-to-expiry into the pull surface's Hard-stop lane — so an expired token reads as "known, queued" instead of a mystery stall three lanes deep.
You'll be working with growth/marketing (the Sonnet-5 leads) daily — their preview-URL proof loop doubles as the pilot for your review cadence, on the lanes where your taste matters most. Start the Ali-review habit where you already are.
Config table — the 62-agent mapping in Donna's format (AIOPS-263) → Donna reviews.
Two canaries — Galadriel on Hermes (memory + recall + delegation) and the Claude-auth canary.
COO disposal — fold into Jessica's routing; Donna keeps the skepticism.
Routines + guardrails — test-fire 2–3 routines; watchdogs on lane roots; iteration caps.
Pull surface v1 live — mobile-first, with the heartbeat + dead-man ping.
Frodo merges one real PR — PR #121 / ACAD-137, preview URL attached.
Memory bootstrap — Tier-1 MEMORY.md per head + weekly distill; Finch owns.
You step back — daily 15-min pull review; 48h Needs-Ali escalation rule.
Everything on this list is reversible except #3 — and even that is receipts-first.
/lesson chat-first direction now owned (ACAD-137), nothing from the discussion thread left untracked.Four things must be true before you go dark: the dead-man switch, the Claude-auth canary, Frodo's first real merge, and a pull surface that exists — everything else can land while you're away.