Topic: Vibe Coding

4 chapters across the catalog

Splashdown
Episode 1859 40:57 - 43:33

1859: Splashdown

Vibe Coding and Decentralized GPU Rental via RunPod and Vast

Developers are increasingly turning to "vibe coding" and decentralized GPU rental platforms like RunPod and Vast to avoid the rising costs and usage limits of frontier models like Anthropic's Claude. These platforms allow users to rent high-end NVIDIA 5090 cards for approximately 30 cents an hour, often sourced from individual gaming computers in locations like Estonia. This peer-to-peer model provides an alternative to centralized data centers and the pricing "timeout windows" imposed by major AI companies.

Bolt Muncher
Episode 1791 1:29:15 - 1:32:02

1791: Bolt Muncher

AI Skepticism, Vibe Coding and Listener Feedback

The hosts addressed listener criticism regarding their "smug" attitude toward artificial intelligence. One host clarified that while they use AI for "vibe coding," they remain skeptical of its impact on art and human relationships. Concerns were raised about the proliferation of chatbots being used for companionship, marriage, and psychiatric advice, which the hosts view as a dangerous "parlor trick."

Cinematic Ambush
Episode 1766 2:06:14 - 2:09:43

1766: Cinematic Ambush

AI Vibe Coding, Darren O'Neill Art, Pro-Mortalist

A host describes spending 250 hours "vibe coding" an AI project, concluding that AI requires "almighty intelligence" to produce quality results. The discussion transitions to the show's album art, featuring a piece by Digital2112man titled "Pro-Mortalist" which depicts the hosts at a "Climate Desk." The hosts joke about their desire to see artists other than the frequent winner Darren O'Neill featured on the leaderboard.

Eat The Babies
Episode 1759 2:03:48 - 2:07:21

1759: Eat The Babies

Vibe Coding, AI Programming, Gell-Mann Amnesia

The hosts discuss "vibe coding," a new term for programming using AI without deep technical knowledge. They describe the experience as working with a "genius kindergartner with ADHD," noting that AI often makes repetitive mistakes. This leads to a discussion of the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect, where experts realize media coverage of their own field is wrong but assume coverage of other topics is accurate.