The author used Google's Gemini in AI Studio to generate an Android gardening app for organizing yard chores, weather-aware care, and plant diagnosis. Gemini quickly produced a working prototype, but the app needed repeated fixes for readability, scheduling, editing, live weather, and task logic. The experience showed that AI can be genuinely useful for narrow tasks, while still lacking real-world judgment and requiring clear human direction.
INSIDE reports that Apple is adding several AI features to Safari, led by a natural-language extension creation feature called “Describe Extension.” Users can describe what they want, and Apple Intelligence helps turn that request into a practical Safari extension. The article frames this as bringing vibe coding to everyday browser customization, though implementation details, model architecture, safety controls, and quality limits are not provided.
While Apple's standard AI features like chatbots and image generation play catch-up, its integration of AI with Shortcuts stands out. By allowing users to generate complex multi-app workflows and automate Safari tabs using simple natural language, Apple is bringing "vibe coding" to the masses. This approach shifts the focus from generic AI assistants to highly personalized, OS-level task automation.
QbitAI covers Bilibili’s “build in bilibili” AI creation contest, which accepts participants regardless of age, profession, education, or technical background. Entrants must build runnable, interactive AI-powered product prototypes and document the process publicly on Bilibili. The article frames the contest as a shift from elite hackathons and startup-style judging toward community co-creation, user feedback, and voting through real platform behavior.