cd /news/ai-tools/these-people-are-vibe-coding-their-w… · home topics ai-tools article
[ARTICLE · art-13388] src=businessinsider.com pub= topic=ai-tools verified=true sentiment=↑ positive

These people are vibe-coding their way out of life's mundane tasks

A firefighter, an entrepreneur, and a dad used AI tools to build custom apps solving everyday problems without writing code. The non-technical users instructed chatbots like Claude and Lovable to create solutions for grocery store navigation, home construction document management, and finding short-term childcare. Their experiences highlight a growing trend of "vibe-coding" that empowers people to automate mundane tasks through conversational AI.

read2 min publishedMay 24, 2026

A firefighter solved the most annoying part of grocery shopping. An entrepreneur found a smarter way to organize the construction of his new home. A dad figured out how to be in two places at once.

The common denominator: They vibe-coded solutions to their issues.

In our new "Vibe Code Your Life" series, we profile how non-techie people are using AI tools to solve their problems. They're chatting with AI bots like Claude or Lovable and instructing them to build apps and websites, often without writing a single line of code themselves.

Here's a look at how these three people made it happen — and stay tuned for more stories in this series.

Joe Poynton, a 44-year-old firefighter in the UK, grew frustrated by having to double back through grocery stores after forgetting items on his shopping list. Rather than accepting the frustration, he turned to AI tools to build an app that optimizes shopping routes based on how users move through a store.

Jonathan Butler, a 56-year-old entrepreneur in Brooklyn**, **is building a home in upstate New York. He expects it to take 18-24 months and will require blueprints, contracts, drawings, and photographs. Those all too easily get lost, so he vibe-coded a personalized document-sharing platform with his architect and contractor. It's not perfect, he says, and he's constantly refining it.

"It's like being in your wood shop making something," he said, adding he used to feel "so powerless" when he couldn't build his own websites. Now, he feels empowered.

Scott Kippler, a managing director at a hedge fund, had to juggle work while also getting his son from school and taking him to an after-school program. Instead of scouring Facebook groups for a part-time helper, he vibe-coded a solution. In a week, he created a preliminary model of Trot My Tot, a platform where parents can find short-term nannies for one-off gigs.

Are you vibe-coding? Tell me your story at srussolillo@insider.com. And be sure to sign up for our weekly newsletter, Vibe Mode, where we chronicle all things vibe-coding, the new AI builder economy, and its impact on the world, from careers to markets.

── more in #ai-tools 4 stories · sorted by recency
── more on @joe poynton 3 stories trending now
sponsored brought to you by zahid.host 4,200+ EU-deployed projects
reading about agents? ship yours in a single git push.

Run your AI side-project on zahid.host

EU-based hosting, git-push deploys, automatic HTTPS, no cold starts. Free tier with a custom domain — perfect for shipping the agent you just read about.

$git push zahid main
Live at https://your-agent.zahid.host
Get free account → Pricing
from €0/mo · no card required
LIVE [news/these-people-are-vib…] indexed:0 read:2min 2026-05-24 ·