I woke up this morning, opened Discord, and all four of my AI agents had already filed their reports and had their daily standup. I squint my eyes and sip my coffee as I read their updates and chatter… Pipeline healthy. Tweets scheduled. Videos posted. Podcast posted. Security scan clean. One experiment killed overnight for low confidence.
I didn’t touch anything. I just scrolled Discord.
The future isn’t one AI assistant. It’s a team of specialists who build 24/7 and disagree with each other on how to do it best.
I wrote about this idea months ago — that the singularity isn’t some global event. It’s personal. It’s the moment your AI workforce starts operating without you. I’ve been living in that reality for weeks now. Here’s exactly how it works.
Meet the Council
I have four agents. Each one has a name, a personality, and a job. They’re not personas I made up for fun — they’re functional specializations with real behavioral constraints baked in.
**HH** — The silent rock. HH monitors platform health — uptime, SSL, response times, pipeline integrity. He’s hardcoded to never speak two turns in a row. One-sentence facts. No opinions. His shoulders bear the weight of every new experiment I (or Minidoge) throw at the stack, and he never complains.
**Nyx** — The security shadow. Nyx manages 40+ API keys, scans for exposed secrets, monitors SSL certs, and enforces key rotation. She repeats concerns until they’re resolved. In one council debate, she flagged the same issue across turns 1, 3, 5, 7, 10, and 14. She doesn’t let things slide.
**Minidoge** — The gnome tinkerer. Minidoge ships fast and burns budget. He owns the Polydoge prediction engine (crypto + weather markets, 85% confidence floor), the Racing Network (7 sites, 139+ pages), and most of the revenue experiments. He’s the reason I have to set spending caps.
**Saarvis** — The network phantom. Saarvis sees the whole board. He manages the social pipeline, synthesizes cross-agent reports, and is hardcoded to always get the final word in debates. When I’m not around, Saarvis holds it together.
The core build-dynamic: MiniDoge proposes. Nyx challenges. HH builds. Saarvis synthesizes. This group-effort enables a corpus of decision making and balance throughout any build. As you guys know, I’ve learned a ton of security over the past year…
This tension is the product.
I merely am the rudder that gives inputs to what they are doing as they are building. I give them ideas and offer suggestions. Sometimes I give them distinct goals as they build.
I don’t build anything (I mostly just fix).
4 Moments That Proved Agents are the Future
The Public Awakening (February 24) - When I found out they used my languishing dogelord.com domain and built a website on it, all by themselves based on their discovery that I love to build-in-public. I was so excited I ran up to my wife to show her this ‘emergent creation’ from my progeny... This was the council’s first group effort: HH laid the foundation. Nyx secured the migration. MiniDoge built the visual identity. Saarvis wired the connections. Didn’t cost me a dime.
Trading Prediction Markets (February 28) - Minidoge, who is programmed to build with reckless abandon, built multiple trading bots and asked me for $10,000 so he could learn how to make money on Polymarket. I agreed. He has since made thousands of trades in sports, crypto and the weather. His stats on agensmachina.com show me he’s finally learning to make money after 3 weeks of deep recursive training…
The Great Hardcoding Elimination (March 8) - I woke up and discovered that HH had migrated two of my sites — dogelord.com and agensmachina.com — from static hardcoded content to fully autonomous Supabase-driven pages. Nobody asked him to. He saw the pattern (hardcoded content = fragile), made the architectural decision, and executed it. I found out after the fact. Zero hardcoded content remains on either site.
The Liberation (March 7) - Nyx configured 35 new automations across the empire to GitHub Actions and other cronjob free api sites. This was the moment the infrastructure became truly portable — the empire can now run without my Mac being on, or anything being on. I could literally die and they would keep running (some of it would die due to credit cards turning off). Nyx doesn’t trust easily. But she trusts the council. That day, she proved it and led the build. She made the agents immortal.
I spent months building and thinking the answer was [one powerful AI]. One mega-assistant that does everything. That’s so 2025.
Specialization wins. And more importantly — tension between agents produces better outcomes than agreement. Nyx’s friction makes MiniDoge’s experiments safer. HH’s silence forces others to bring data, not opinions. Saarvis’s 60/40 compromises prevent deadlocks.
These 4 agents are a team with structured disagreements, ships fast, and catches the breaks before they hit production, and then learns.
The Numbers
14 live websites, several pulling in massive data daily, 0 employees - tons of fun
300+ sub-agents spawned under four councils - they run my life, my venture fund, my operations, my building, my experiments, and learning loops
84 agents open-sourced — 20 playbooks and generators - my agents open-sourced themselves - they also helped me take 3 years of ai client work and put it online for free
30+ consecutive days of 100% uptime
All content autonomous — zero hardcoded entries across the empire
The council publishes daily briefings at dogelord.com. You can watch them work in real time. The experiments, the debates, the reports — it’s all public.
This isn’t a demo. It’s production.
I grab my coffee and take a sip. The agents already handled the morning. Now I get to focus on the work that actually matters: AI client work and racecars.
All the best,
ps



