Real People
Picture this: a guy in his basement, no CS degree, says to Cursor: Build me a simple weather widget—city name in, temp out. Five minutes later? Done. He posts it on Reddit, gets 200 likes. Or a mom who hates spreadsheets—asks Claude: Turn my grocery list into a shopping app. Boom, clickable version. She's not coding—she's just asking.
The trick? They treat AI like a teammate. Not perfect—sometimes it spits out junk—but they fix it fast: Nope, make the button blue. It's less about being smart, more about being stubborn.
Some people build companies this way—zero typing marathons. Everyone's doing it now: freelancers, students, even old-school coders. The dev world is evolving. Like how calculators killed long division, but nobody cares at this point.
