Comment by Mongoose
3 days ago
Agent orchestration seems to be the new hot problem to be solved in the ecosystem. See also Steve Yegge's most recent posts [1]. Curious to see what tools emerge as the winners of the Cambrian explosion we're probably about to see.
[1] https://steve-yegge.medium.com/the-future-of-coding-agents-e...
Totally. Yegge's post was fascinating and there was quite a bit of chatter about it internally at my company . I have this feeling that if I could just figure out how to effectively direct 10-20+ coding agents at once, I could supercharge my productivity and bug squashing skills. In some ways his post introducing a suite of new terminology helps to set the stage for this being a whole new world of being a SW engr.
There won't be a single orchestration winner, orchestration will just become ubiquitous in LoB systems. Slack and Github will probably be the biggest targets but it's pretty simple to create a chat bridge that supports adapters to support discord/telegram/etc and you can already do webhook orchestration easily enough.
This is what we are looking at at one of my clients. A2A clients (Slack, Google Meet, considering email) to A2A Orchestrator server (in-house, might be open-sourced) with specialized subagents for e.g. GitHub issue creation following a specific teams patterns and conventions, hooked up to company-wide MCP gateway with federated OIDC trust for passthrough auth (https://www.gatana.ai)
Works pretty well so far. Biggest issue i foresee for success is user UX for average employee, and actually useful use-cases.