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phoronixrlytoday at 3:03 PM3 repliesview on HN

Interesting? I'd say they were interesting if you find looking at vibe-coded stuff interesting. If you're instead into learning from projects based on the author's unique insight, experience and research, they're utterly boring...

I find that I just don't learn anything new from Show HN vibe-coded side projects, and I can often replicate them in a couple of hundred of dollars, so why bother looking at them? Also why bother sharing one in the first place, since it doesn't really show any personal prowess, and doesn't bring value to the community due to it being easy to replicate?


Replies

michaelcampbelltoday at 3:05 PM

> Interesting? I'd say they were interesting if you find looking at vibe-coded stuff interesting.

There's a lot of ways things can be of interest. The problem being solved, how it's being solved, the UI, UX, etc.

THAT it is vibe coded may or may not be interesting to some, but finding it un-interesting because it's vibe coded is no better than finding that it is.

bdcravenstoday at 5:05 PM

This assumes that pre-LLM projects were based on the author's unique insight, experience and research, and not just boilerplated framework code, copying the design trends of the week.

I'd challenge the lack of personal prowess argument. Piecing together technology in novel ways to solve highly targeted problems is a skill, even if you're not hand-crafting CSS and SQL.

I liken it to those who tune cars, who buy cars made in a factory, install parts made by someone else, using tools that are all standardized. In the middle somewhere is the human making decisions to create a final result, which is where the talent exists.

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fookertoday at 3:46 PM

Yes, I find looking at vibe coded stuff interesting when they solve a worthy problem.

No amount of denial will roll back the technology that millions can use now, that makes it realistic to produce in a day software that would take at least months five years ago.