May 4th, 2026
Agents that ask before acting
This newsletter was brought to you byElevenLabsAgents that ask before acting
gm legends, happy Monday.
An agent platform betting that human oversight is the actual product, a comic store paying 80% to creators without asking for exclusivity, 20,000 AI coding sessions turned into trading cards, and a thread on whether self-hosting is a tax or just something your particular brain enjoys.
Delegation that doesn't go rogue

Mindra is an AI agent team platform where you assign tasks to specialized agent groups built around governance structures and human oversight checkpoints β positioning trustworthiness as the feature rather than racing toward full autonomy.
π₯ Our Take: The case here isn't that autonomous agents don't work β it's that most people still won't fully hand off tasks to something they can't audit mid-flight. Governance structures aren't a constraint; they're the reason you'd actually delegate something that matters, rather than something you could afford to lose.
The Bandcamp of digital comics

Panels Store is a DRM-free comic marketplace from brothers Dani and Victor, who spent eight years building the Panels reader app out of frustration with how digital comics were sold, now giving creators 80% revenue share, no lock-in, and no exclusivity β explicitly modeled on Image Comics' creator-ownership philosophy.
π₯ Our Take: Two guys who are genuinely into comics built the best reader, accumulated the audience, and are now using it to build the store they wished existed. The 80% cut isn't a marketing angle β it's the thing they actually believe. Most DRM-free alternatives fail because they have to convince readers to show up; Dani and Victor already solved that part.
So weβre justβ¦ talking to software now?

ElevenLabs has been the go-to for voice for a while. Now they've turned that expertise into agents that actually get things done. You set one up, it talks like a real person, listens, responds, and helps handle the task β support calls, bookings, whatever the job is. Not a demo, not a "press 1 for sales" situation. It's ready to deploy. Feels like one of those shifts where the interface quietly changes. Less typing, less clicking, more just saying what needs to happen and letting it play out.
Trading cards for AI

Rudel analyzes your Claude Code and Codex usage β sessions, token patterns, error signals β against 20,000 aggregated sessions to classify you into one of nine AI coder archetypes and generate a shareable trading card.
π₯ Our Take: The bit worth knowing before you open it: the most common archetype in 20,000 sessions isn't the power user, which means most of us have a skewed picture of how we actually use these tools. The card is the hook, but the classification is the thing.
Is self-hosting a trap for makers?

Wasil Abdal (@wasil_abdal) asked whether self-hosting is actually worth it β his argument: the hidden time costs (3am debugging, SSL maintenance, backup failures) make the savings illusory unless compliance forces your hand.
Stan Kolotinskiy pushed back hard. His counter: a β¬35 VPS is cheaper than EC2, and Let's Encrypt isn't a real problem in 2026. His sharper point was that some builders enjoy the infrastructure work β which means the cost-vs-savings framing misses the point entirely. Alper Tayfur synthesized it: "Self-hosting makes sense only when control is the product requirement."
Shyun Bill's line cut the other way: "Managed hosting buys your freedom back."
Good thread if you've been running your own servers and trying to decide whether it's discipline or just a sunk-cost habit at this point.
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