Use Claude Code, Figma MCP, Supabase MCP, Lovable, v0.dev.
Find where your interests overlap interesting tech, and who knows, you might be able to build a business from it
Use Claude Code, Figma MCP, Supabase MCP, Lovable, v0.dev.
Find where your interests overlap interesting tech, and who knows, you might be able to build a business from it
In my opinion you can't solely rely on ai you need to get up to speed on terms definitions and patterns
- Chatbots, copilots, search assistants. - Image/audio/video tools that make sense to non-technical users. - Data visualization for AI outputs. - etc.
These can keep you in your comfort zone while you integrate AI.
It's not quite "vibe" coding as you lose a little speed, but it's what I find most useful.
Don't go too deep into courses. The facts on the ground changes every month. Don't try to keep up with the hype.
Go out and build things with it. You'll hit a bottleneck. You'll understand how the new tools fix that bottleneck. GPT-5 is absolutely amazing for a number of reasons, but not to the people who rely on the strawberrry benchmark. The AI influencers are also making their money from being contrarian. If you're building things, you'll see through the smoke and mirrors.
I've tried most of the major UI/UX tools now, even dug deep into reddit. Most are slop. You'll get generic UIs, rounded buttons, material designed. Half will have a navigation drawer and bottom bar on the same screen. I doubt the design problem will be solved anytime soon.
The main issue is AI does what is most popular. So it'll fall to the average. Architectures are often dated. The purpose of UI is to stand out. But these UI tools are being designed by mediocre designers and create UI that looks like everyone else's. There's not even some randomization most of the time, so you end up with purple drop shadows everywhere.
For this, learn the foundations. How to design to sell. What is typography (not kerning etc, but words as pictures and emotion). AI knows all these concepts, but won't do it unless you tell it to.
He was good at drawing, so one day he took drawing classes. He realized that the class just repeated everything he learned on his own.
It clicked that he was a "natural" at art and not at juggling. What natural skill meant was simply coming to the right techniques early on compared to other people who might need years to discover the same thing.
He eventually became a really good juggler, by interviewing other "naturals" and reverse engineering how they got there (they just practiced better). Most naturals don't even realize what they're doing right or what others are doing wrong. When naturals do classes, they're sometimes not even that helpful.