2/20/2026 at 12:20:49 PM
How is this already #1 on the front page with 12 upvotes and 9 comments…The article doesn’t reveal much. It feels like a fluff piece, and I can’t comprehend what the goal of sharing “we use AI agents” means for the dev community, with little to no examples to share. For a “dev” micro blog, this feels very lackluster. Maybe the Minion could have helped with the technical docs?
EDIT: slightly adjusts tinfoil hat minutes later it’s at #6
by testfrequency
2/20/2026 at 1:23:20 PM
It has all the trappings of NIH syndrome.Reinventing the wheel without explaining why existing tools didn't work
Creating buzzwords ("blueprints" "devboxes") for concepts that are not novel and already have common terms
Yet they embrace MCP of all things as a transport layer- the one part of the common "agentic" stack that genuinely sucks and needs to be reinvented
by nylonstrung
2/20/2026 at 5:20:13 PM
They mention "Why did we build it ourselves" in the part1 series: https://stripe.dev/blog/minions-stripes-one-shot-end-to-end-...However, it is also light on material. I would also like to hear more technical details, they're probably intentionally secretive about it.
But I do, however, understand that building an agent that is highly optimized for your own codebase/process is possible. In fact, I am pretty sure many companies do that but it's not yet in the ether.
Otherwise, one of the most interesting bits from the article was
> Over 1,300 Stripe pull requests (up from 1,000 as of Part 1) merged each week are completely minion-produced, human-reviewed, but containing no human-written code.
by menaerus
2/20/2026 at 5:27:14 PM
"human reviewed""LGTM..."
I feel like code review is already hard and under done the 'velocity' here is only going to make that worse.
I am also curious how this works when the new crop of junior devs do not have the experience enough to review code but are not getting the experience from writing it.
Time will tell I guess.
by tempest_
2/20/2026 at 5:39:25 PM
Agents can already do the review by themselves. I'd be surprised they review all of the code by hand. They probably can't mention it due to the regulatory of the field itself. But from what I have seen agentic review tools are already between 80th and 90th percentile. Out of randomly picked 10 engineers, it will provide more useful comments than most engineers.by menaerus
2/20/2026 at 6:13:22 PM
the problem with LLM code review is that it's good at checking local consistency and minor bugs, but it generally can't tell you if you are solving the wrong problem or if your approach is a bad one for non-technical reasons.This is an enormous drawback and makes LLM code review more akin to a linter at the moment.
by tibbar
2/20/2026 at 6:23:10 PM
I mean if the model can reason about making the changes on the large-scale repository then this implies it can also reason about the change somebody else did, no? I kinda agree and disagree with you at the same time, which is why I said most of the engineers but I believe we are heading towards the model being able to completely autonomously write and review its own changes.by menaerus
2/20/2026 at 6:33:39 PM
There's a good chance that in the long run LLMs can become good at this, but this would require them e.g. being plugged into the meetings and so on that led to a particular feature request. To be a good software engineer, you need all the inputs that software engineers get.by tibbar
2/20/2026 at 6:49:55 PM
If you read thoroughly through Stripe blog, you will see that they feed their model already with this or similar type of information. Being plugged into the meetings might just mean feed the model with the meeting minutes or let the model listen to the meeting and transcribe the meeting. It seems to me that both of them are possible even as of today.by menaerus
2/20/2026 at 4:06:04 PM
What are the common terms for those? (I have heard "devbox" across multiple companies, and I'm not in the LLM world enough to know the other parts.)by __float
2/20/2026 at 3:38:33 PM
I was an early MCP hater, but one thing I will say about it is that it's useful as a common interface for secure centralization. I can control auth and policy centrally via a MCP gateway in a way that would be much harder if I had to stitch together API proxies, CLIs, etc to provide capabilities.by CuriouslyC
2/20/2026 at 3:07:29 PM
resume driven developmentby throwaway-aws9
2/20/2026 at 5:55:57 PM
>Reinventing the wheel without explaining why existing tools didn't workWon‘t that be the nee normal with all those AI agents?
No frameworks, no libraries, just let AI create everything from scratch again
by croes
2/20/2026 at 3:19:38 PM
well, it's very important, now you know the financial code is handled by a bunch of barely supervised AI tools and can make decisions on whether to use product or not based on thatby PunchyHamster
2/20/2026 at 3:13:44 PM
Stripe was launched through Y Combinator. It makes sense for their stuff to quickly bubble to the top of their news aggregator.by netule
2/20/2026 at 12:48:11 PM
Likely they have whitelisted domaine names that go straight to the home page. Would make sense to put all Y combinator ex and new startup sites.Marketting is a major goal of HN after all.
by BiteCode_dev
2/20/2026 at 1:53:32 PM
Or the simpler explanation (which is probably closer to the truth): Stripe is a very popular company on HN as many people use them, their founders sometimes comment here and if they share their opinion on something people pay attention and upvote it.by dewey
2/20/2026 at 5:35:13 PM
Doesn't explain how you get to the frontpage with less than 20 upvotes magically.by BiteCode_dev
2/20/2026 at 5:44:40 PM
You only need about 4 upvotes in the first 20 minutes or so to get on the front page. It's the same for every story.by steveklabnik
2/20/2026 at 2:09:02 PM
Or the even simpler explanation, that whenever Stripe posts a blog post, they have nine or 10 employees waiting to upvote it the moment it goes live.by nullstyle
2/20/2026 at 1:15:57 PM
your absolut lee r8by handfuloflight