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Vibe coding is here to stay, but it's not the endgame.
Summary
OpenAI board chair Bret Taylor said vibe coding will become commonplace, but he argues the bigger disruption will be AI agents that change how software is structured and operated.
Content
Bret Taylor, chair of OpenAI's board, told the Big Technology Podcast that using AI to quickly build software with natural language prompts will soon feel normal. He cautioned that focusing only on speeding up today's software misses a larger change. Taylor said the structure of software itself is likely to shift toward AI agents that operate against databases. He also noted AI has lowered development costs but has not solved maintenance challenges or the risk of errors.
Key points:
- Bret Taylor said vibe coding will become commonplace but is not the most interesting long-term question in software.
- Taylor described AI agents as "the future of software," saying tasks will be delegated to agents that act on databases.
- He raised the question of whether organizations will acquire agents off the shelf or build them in-house.
- Taylor noted AI reduces the cost of building software but does not eliminate maintenance burdens or error risks.
- Google CEO Sundar Pichai said vibe coding makes coding more enjoyable and reported AI generates over 30% of Google's new code as of April.
- Engineer Boris Cherny said vibe coding is useful for prototypes or throwaway code but is less suited to core, highly maintainable systems.
Summary:
If AI agents replace traditional dashboards and apps, the way software is designed and delivered could change significantly. That would create new choices about who builds and maintains agents and how those responsibilities are shared. Undetermined at this time.
