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> …but the engineering team struggles to adopt them…

I have no way of knowing the answer to this question I wonder about: Does leadership consider AI adoption as being synonymous with vibe coding?

My knowledge of vibe coding is informed more or less completely by this one video I discovered this past summer [1]

The approach to coding I'm seeing in that video is impressive! No question! But it's also what I call the epitome of tech debt multiplying.

If vibe coding is what leadership expects the engineering team to be adopting, then there's a saying that goes, "Be careful what you ask for…"

[1] https://www.youtube.com/live/Pv5DU1nwp6U?si=4ic-HQvHWmVTyFIA



I think the term "vibe coding" has no universally accepted definition but if you mean "coding without any prior coding experience" then the answer is no. Any leadership that know even the slightest about software know that AI tooling is on a spectrum. Vibe coding is at one end and tools like Claude Code and Cursor are on the other.


    > …if you mean "coding without any prior coding experience"…
Nobody would mistake these thread titles [1] to mean the vibe coder they refer to is "coding without any prior coding experience".

The two fanboys in the video I linked above don't give the impression that they're "coding without any prior coding experience".

    > …AI tooling is on a spectrum. Vibe coding is at one end…
I'm pretty sure those three vibe coders mention their usage of some relatively sophisticated (to me) AI tooling in their adoption of vibe coding.

     > …then the answer is no…
Then what is the answer given the above clarification?

The question again: Does leadership consider AI adoption as being synonymous with vibe coding?

[1] https://g2ww.short.gy/gitWiTheProgramr




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