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My yard is dying, so I made an app for that

By the AIdeaFlow Team

My yard is dying, so I made an app for that

A user trying to save their dying yard just built an app with a single prompt. They left their computer for five minutes and came back to find a working app in a preview window. Along with it was a message about a critical bug.

The error said something about a broken channel. But there was also a button to fix the bug. The user clicked it, and in 233 seconds the AI reported success. It explained the fix with terms like blockages and race conditions, which the user didn't understand.

This is a small glimpse into a fast moving trend. AI tools are getting better at writing code from simple instructions. But they still need a human to step in and make decisions when things go wrong.

For anyone using AI in their work, this matters. It shows that you don't need to be a developer to create useful tools. But it also shows that AI is not fully autonomous yet. You still play a role in guiding it.

That mix of power and limitation is exciting. It means more people can build their own solutions. But it also means we need to stay involved and understand what the AI is doing, even if we don't get every technical detail.

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