Sure, if they're tested well enough that there are no obvious UX issues (which is usually not the case)
It's just that there's zero effort put into them so they don't really offer anything of value. If you write a todo list-tier app, it would be completely useless to most people, but it's a learning project for you. If you vibecoded a todo list-tier app, it's completely useless to most people including yourself.
So if a platform is vibe-coded, it suddenly has no value? When the Spotify founder vibe-codes an app, it’s praised—but when an open-source contributor like me does it, it’s seen as a bad thing? That doesn’t seem fair
/r/selfhosted just added a new rule, vibe coded apps only on Friday because there were just too many.
They’re created to offer functional outcomes. If they’re doing so in a friendly interface then I’m cool with that
Sure, if they're tested well enough that there are no obvious UX issues (which is usually not the case)
It's just that there's zero effort put into them so they don't really offer anything of value. If you write a todo list-tier app, it would be completely useless to most people, but it's a learning project for you. If you vibecoded a todo list-tier app, it's completely useless to most people including yourself.
So if a platform is vibe-coded, it suddenly has no value? When the Spotify founder vibe-codes an app, it’s praised—but when an open-source contributor like me does it, it’s seen as a bad thing? That doesn’t seem fair
Where is the source then?
change my mind after the tailwind thing happened not going to open source it for now.
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