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A former Google veteran used vibe coding to test a cat-purring app. It was fun, but wasn't purrfect.

13 June 2025 at 17:37
A white fluffy cat in a bag.
A white fluffy cat in a bag.

Prapass Pulsub/Getty Images

This is the space where I usually try an AI tool. This week, though, I'm featuring an experience shared by a Tech Memo reader who got in touch after last week's installment about AI coding services such as Replit, Cursor, and Bolt.new.

This person worked at Google for more than two decades, so they know their software! They recently tried out Replit, following Google CEO Sundar Pichai saying he's been messing around with this tool.

"Like Sundar, I've also tried Replit to test out a cat purring app I had (lol). I poked around on some other options, but I liked Replit because it took the query and really built an app for you (even on the free test version). So based on a query alone and answering some questions (e.g., do you want people to be able to log in and save their cat?), you had an app. And it would work! You could launch it if you were really interested and happy with it.

"The limitations came with fine-tuning the app from there, as it seemed to get confused (and use up your credits) if you asked it for changes, e.g., change how the cat looked. It also was a pretty rough product; ultimately, if you wanted more than a proof of concept, you'd probably want to delve into the software code and change things yourself versus relying on queries.

"Over time, I think they'll fine-tune these things and I love how it makes it easy to prototype ideas. It really lowers the upfront cost of testing ideas."

Thank you, dear reader, for getting in touch. I have also been messing around with an AI coding tool. I chose Bolt.new, partly because I recently met the cofounder of the startup behind this service, Stackblitz's Eric Simons (another Tech Memo reader, btw). Next week, I'll share some thoughts about Bolt. I've been building something with my daughter Tessa and we can't wait to show you!

Read the original article on Business Insider

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says programming AI is similar to how you 'program a person'

9 June 2025 at 14:59
A picture of Jensen Huang with his arms outstretched on stage
AI is the "great equalizer," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at London Tech Week.

CARL COURT/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

  • Jensen Huang said people programming AI is similar to the way "you program a person."
  • Speaking at London Tech Week, the Nvidia CEO said all anyone had to do to program AI was "just ask nicely."
  • He called AI "the great equalizer, " allowing anyone to program computers using plain language.

Nvidia CEOΒ Jensen Huang has said that programming AI is similar to "the way you program a person" β€” and that "human" is the new coders' language.

"The thing that's really, really quite amazing is the way you program an AI is like the way you program a person," Huang told London Tech Week on Monday.

Huang shared an example, saying, "You say, 'You are an incredible poet. You are deeply steeped in Shakespeare, and I would like you to write a poem to describe today's keynote.' Without very much effort, this AI would help you generate such a wonderful poem.

"And when it answers, you could say, 'I feel like you could do even better.' And it will go off and think about it and it will come back and say, 'In fact, I can do better.' And it does do a better job."

Huang said that in the past, "technology was hard to use" and that to access computer science, "we had to learn programming languages, architect systems, and design very complicated computers.

"But now, all of a sudden, there's a new programming language. This new programming language is called human."

"Most people don't know C++, very few people know Python, and everybody, as you know, knows human."

Huang called AI "the great equalizer" for making technology accessible to everyone and called the shift "transformative.

"This way of interacting with computers, I think, is something that almost anybody can do," he said.

"The way you program a computer today is to ask the computer to do something for you, even write a program, generate images, write a poem β€” just ask it nicely," Huang added.

At the World Government Summit in Dubai last year, Huang suggested the tech sector should focus less on coding and more on using AI as a tool across fields like farming, biology, and education.

"It is our job to create computing technology such that nobody has to program. And that the programming language is human, everybody in the world is now a programmer. This is the miracle of artificial intelligence," Huang said at the time.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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