There's a woman that had a very rare eye disease and required her to do certain exercises, and she built an app that helps her do these exercises with her eyes every day. There's a woman in Korea and her kid has a very rare disease, and she built an app to manage that disease on a day to day basis.
“Some of the medical things were really interesting.”
enabled? Some of the medical things were really interesting. I I believe because it's so outside of the purview. I wouldn't have imagined it even. But, you know, there's a there's a woman that had, like, a very, rare eye disease and required her to do certain exercises, and she she built an app that helps her do these exercises with her eyes every day. There's a woman in Korea and her kid has also like a very rare disease, and she built an app to like manage that disease on a day to day basis,
Why this clip
Powerful human-interest stories showing real-world impact of democratized coding tools. The specificity of medical use cases and personal stakes make it emotionally compelling and shareable.
What they said next
My generation is the last generation where the tools were really a joy to use, and then it became very industrialized. When we were programming, I started on Infogel Basic. Infogel Basic was a very creative interface. At some point, I think in the mid two thousands, everything became this Linux terminal.
7:22 - 52s · Bold/Contrarian
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