The shocking part of this story is not that you could vibe code a note taking app in a week, it's the idea that it would cost $300 in LLM agent fees!
That's too much and speaks poorly of both the tool he chose and the vibe approach. A more experienced programmer wouldn't have used $300 worth of credits building this.
That and the fact that most of those AI-generated web sites are clones of the thousand of applications that already exist, except that they now require an internet connection and a Google account for some reason.
His tool looks like a sticky note application with some Markdown inside. I'm pretty sure there are plugins that already can do this on Obsidian or any other text editor. It's funny to try to "vibe it" yourself but it's really useless in the long run since you'll be the one who will maintain it compared to the other projects with a good community behind.
100%. I love DIY software but I only build it if it's going to be better that what's already out there. And the "better" part has to include maintaining, extending, and deploying it. Those are the parts a non-dev won't want to do. Heck, I don't want to do it either (that's not the fun stuff), but flow coding or pair programming with an agent makes that part easier.
It's interesting what you can build now without looking under the hood. But if he wants to continue using the app, he's about to find out that there's more to software that just coding a prototype.
The shocking part of this story is not that you could vibe code a note taking app in a week, it's the idea that it would cost $300 in LLM agent fees!
That's too much and speaks poorly of both the tool he chose and the vibe approach. A more experienced programmer wouldn't have used $300 worth of credits building this.
That and the fact that most of those AI-generated web sites are clones of the thousand of applications that already exist, except that they now require an internet connection and a Google account for some reason.
His tool looks like a sticky note application with some Markdown inside. I'm pretty sure there are plugins that already can do this on Obsidian or any other text editor. It's funny to try to "vibe it" yourself but it's really useless in the long run since you'll be the one who will maintain it compared to the other projects with a good community behind.
100%. I love DIY software but I only build it if it's going to be better that what's already out there. And the "better" part has to include maintaining, extending, and deploying it. Those are the parts a non-dev won't want to do. Heck, I don't want to do it either (that's not the fun stuff), but flow coding or pair programming with an agent makes that part easier.
It's interesting what you can build now without looking under the hood. But if he wants to continue using the app, he's about to find out that there's more to software that just coding a prototype.
[dead]