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.

11:00 / 11:28

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,

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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.

11:00 - 11:2829sConsequences

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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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