Explore the rise of 'vibe coding,' where English replaces programming languages and the developer's role shifts from writing code to curating AI-generated ideas.

The human role shifts from being a translator for the machine to being a curator of ideas. The expertise shifts from technical execution to taste and judgment.
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**Lena:** So, Miles, I was thinking—if the hottest new programming language is actually just English, does that mean we’ve all been "coders" this whole time without knowing it?
**Miles:** It’s a provocative thought, isn't it? That’s essentially what Andrej Karpathy hinted at when he coined the term "vibe coding." He described building entire apps just by talking to an AI assistant, focusing on the *feeling* of the project rather than the syntax.
**Lena:** It sounds almost too easy. I mean, if 30% of new code at big tech companies is already being written by AI, are we reaching a point where we can just forget the code exists entirely?
**Miles:** That’s the big question. Is "coding" about the semicolons and brackets, or is it actually about the intent behind them? When you can build a functional prototype in twenty minutes just by describing a "vibe," the human role shifts from being a translator for the machine to being a curator of ideas.
**Lena:** But does that speed come at the cost of actually understanding how our own tools work? Let’s explore how this shift from technical skill to pure judgment is changing everything.