If the ASIAIR is able to tell where the camera is pointed to in regards to the target's location, then it would be a really good idea for the ASIAIR to be able to detect how far away from where you aligned your mount to initially. Then you can set a threshold on how far a target has to drift before the mount stops where it is in its imaging session, realigns the mount to the target automatically (especially for targets that take up most, if not all of the screen), and continuing where it left off from.
Over a span of a couple hours, my mount may drift by a couple of arcminutes to a few if something weird happens or if clouds roll over for a period of time whilst I'm asleep. It could mean that the image drifts over by 10% of the screen's distance and I have to throw those exposures away because the target star for the guide camera couldn't be picked up for a while.
Perhaps, if the guidescope loses its target star for more than a minute and once it sees it and waits until it's back centered for another minute, the computer checks how far from the object it is, and if it's actually further than the threshold set, it realigns the mount for you.
That's at least one more step that can be automated by the ASIAIR.