Nucleus

Nucleus

Stripe's API docs were so good developers read them for fun

12 min · 24. maj 2026
episode Stripe's API docs were so good developers read them for fun cover

Description

Stripe just hit a trillion dollars in annual payments—that's the entire GDP of Indonesia flowing through a company built by two Irish brothers who started coding as teenagers. Patrick Collison spent 16 years obsessing over the boring problem of online payments while every other founder chased viral growth, and now Stripe processes money for millions of businesses by letting developers integrate checkout in seven lines of code. The wildest part is how he did it: moving slowly, making documentation so good people read it for fun, and turning down the Silicon Valley playbook of growth at all costs.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Nucleus community!

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

22 episodes

episode Vitalik Buterin published a whitepaper at 19 and built a $500B network artwork

Vitalik Buterin published a whitepaper at 19 and built a $500B network

Vitalik Buterin wrote the Ethereum whitepaper at 19, raised $18 million with no venture backing, and then spent the next decade deliberately trying to make himself unnecessary to the system he built. This episode traces the decisions that defined that arc: the choice to structure Ethereum as a nonprofit when co-founders wanted equity, the 48-hour crisis in 2016 when $60 million was drained from the network and the only fix meant violating blockchain's core principle, and the quiet leadership model behind it all, where influence flows entirely from the quality of your thinking, not your title. If you have ever wondered what it actually looks like to lead something you refuse to control, Buterin's story is the clearest answer in modern tech.

31. maj 202611 min
episode Alan Mulally Saved Ford Without Government Bailout artwork

Alan Mulally Saved Ford Without Government Bailout

Twelve years after Alan Mulally retired from Ford, business schools are still teaching his playbook because he did something almost impossible—he saved Ford from bankruptcy without taking government bailout money while GM and Chrysler collapsed. The airplane guy who'd never sold a car walked into a company losing 17 billion dollars annually where executives literally wore different colored suits to show which division they belonged to, and he fixed it by doing one radical thing: making people tell the truth about problems. His move to mortgage everything Ford owned in 2006—including the iconic Blue Oval logo—for a 23.6 billion dollar credit line seemed reckless until the 2008 financial crisis hit and suddenly Ford had cash while competitors were begging Congress for survival money.

10. maj 202614 min