Wow, the part about learning from the younger generation realy stood out to me, that's such an important perspective, especially as a teacher myself. How do you find their general outlook on the rapid changes with things like OpenClaw?
Hi @Rainbow Roxy it is a great question! Honestly I find a mix of outlooks… In some cases unfortunately I see kids who are not coping well with too much social media, and a sense the world is not going to offer them good outcomes, but more optimistically I see many young people who are leaning into the change, and realizing they can tap into the opportunity. In some big businesses I work with, the young people are really leading the way and showing leaders how to use these new technologies. I think it’s the sense of discovery and curiosity to learn that we want to inculcate early. Once kids get a taste of that they get hooked, and are very adaptable even to rapidly changing technologies.
What a moment .. almost missed it, and did miss most of it! Not sure where to go now with OpenClaw. To your question, I'm currently vibe coding for the first time (Replit & Claude mostly). This has helped our team tremendously go from Vision (me) to reality (developer team) - by being able to quickly prototype my vision in action, developers can much more easily turn the envisioned prototype into a reality within our enterprise-grade product (vs. the alternative of trying to describe the requirements in a PRD, with all the illusions of agreement that tend to emerge following. While vibe coding I'm sure already seems ancient to some, for us it's less about the actual vibe coding and more about the collapsing of time from Vision to Alignment to Execution (of a product that is as envisioned).
You bring up a great point Ross, there is really no one size fits all approach for how people adopt the tools. People are going after such diverse opportunities! I'm glad the vibe coding is starting to work for you and your team... as you said it is shrinking the iteration time that is so crucial.
Wow, the part about learning from the younger generation realy stood out to me, that's such an important perspective, especially as a teacher myself. How do you find their general outlook on the rapid changes with things like OpenClaw?
Hi @Rainbow Roxy it is a great question! Honestly I find a mix of outlooks… In some cases unfortunately I see kids who are not coping well with too much social media, and a sense the world is not going to offer them good outcomes, but more optimistically I see many young people who are leaning into the change, and realizing they can tap into the opportunity. In some big businesses I work with, the young people are really leading the way and showing leaders how to use these new technologies. I think it’s the sense of discovery and curiosity to learn that we want to inculcate early. Once kids get a taste of that they get hooked, and are very adaptable even to rapidly changing technologies.
I was almost expecting openmolt …
Well... in another few days we may get more name changes ;)
What a moment .. almost missed it, and did miss most of it! Not sure where to go now with OpenClaw. To your question, I'm currently vibe coding for the first time (Replit & Claude mostly). This has helped our team tremendously go from Vision (me) to reality (developer team) - by being able to quickly prototype my vision in action, developers can much more easily turn the envisioned prototype into a reality within our enterprise-grade product (vs. the alternative of trying to describe the requirements in a PRD, with all the illusions of agreement that tend to emerge following. While vibe coding I'm sure already seems ancient to some, for us it's less about the actual vibe coding and more about the collapsing of time from Vision to Alignment to Execution (of a product that is as envisioned).
You bring up a great point Ross, there is really no one size fits all approach for how people adopt the tools. People are going after such diverse opportunities! I'm glad the vibe coding is starting to work for you and your team... as you said it is shrinking the iteration time that is so crucial.