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Vercel’s Guillermo Rauch on What Comes After Coding - Ep. 47

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Manage episode 465110788 series 3537585
Content provided by Dan Shipper. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dan Shipper or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Guillermo Rauch is one of the most prolific coders of this generation.

But he doesn’t think of himself as a coder anymore.

Coding, he says, is a specific skill that AI is becoming great at. Instead, he thinks the future of coding is more holistic, full-stack engineers who can ideate, design, and execute all together.

Guillermo is the founder and CEO of Vercel, the creator of NextJS, and SocketIO. We spent an hour talking about the future of software development in an AI world—and the meta-skills that are essential for the coders of today to master—in order to use tomorrow’s tools to their fullest extent.

Here are a few takeaways:

  • One of the most important keys to his success is taste—and developing taste is all about paying better attention to everything you experience day to day.
  • He’s great at recognizing bleeding-edge technologies with extremely practical applications but that have bad user experiences. If you can learn to recognize those and build with them, you might build the next NextJs or SocketIO.
  • He’s already seeing enterprises use Vercel’s AI coding copilot v0 to replace all of their programming—they just send v0 demos back and forth to iterate on new prototypes.
  • Why prototype cultures are becoming common in AI—and the benefits of written cultures like Amazon vs. prototype cultures like Apple for different kinds of companies.
  • For developers building frameworks, always put the product first; a framework in isolation without a “customer zero” is never going to be a good tool.
  • The theory of “recursive founder mode”—if you want to build a scalable business, you have to scale yourself by creating an atmosphere that nurtures talent and ambition.
  • AI tools are shifting software toward consumption-based billing models, making us capital allocators who decide how much compute the AI consumes.
  • The future of AI is agents with the taste, knowledge, and tools to perform specialized tasks.

If you found this episode interesting, please like, subscribe, comment, and share!

Want even more?

Sign up for Every to unlock our ultimate guide to prompting ChatGPT. It’s usually only for paying subscribers, but you can get it here for free.

To hear more from Dan Shipper:

Subscribe to Every: https://every.to/subscribe

Follow him on X: https://twitter.com/danshipper

Links to resources mentioned in the episode:

Guillermo Rauch: @rauchg

Vercel: https://vercel.com/

Last week’s episode with Nabeel Hyatt: 🎧 The Venture Capitalist Who Finds the Best AI Products—Before They Win

Dan’s essay about the allocation economy: The Knowledge Economy Is Over. Welcome to the Allocation Economy

  continue reading

66 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 465110788 series 3537585
Content provided by Dan Shipper. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dan Shipper or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Guillermo Rauch is one of the most prolific coders of this generation.

But he doesn’t think of himself as a coder anymore.

Coding, he says, is a specific skill that AI is becoming great at. Instead, he thinks the future of coding is more holistic, full-stack engineers who can ideate, design, and execute all together.

Guillermo is the founder and CEO of Vercel, the creator of NextJS, and SocketIO. We spent an hour talking about the future of software development in an AI world—and the meta-skills that are essential for the coders of today to master—in order to use tomorrow’s tools to their fullest extent.

Here are a few takeaways:

  • One of the most important keys to his success is taste—and developing taste is all about paying better attention to everything you experience day to day.
  • He’s great at recognizing bleeding-edge technologies with extremely practical applications but that have bad user experiences. If you can learn to recognize those and build with them, you might build the next NextJs or SocketIO.
  • He’s already seeing enterprises use Vercel’s AI coding copilot v0 to replace all of their programming—they just send v0 demos back and forth to iterate on new prototypes.
  • Why prototype cultures are becoming common in AI—and the benefits of written cultures like Amazon vs. prototype cultures like Apple for different kinds of companies.
  • For developers building frameworks, always put the product first; a framework in isolation without a “customer zero” is never going to be a good tool.
  • The theory of “recursive founder mode”—if you want to build a scalable business, you have to scale yourself by creating an atmosphere that nurtures talent and ambition.
  • AI tools are shifting software toward consumption-based billing models, making us capital allocators who decide how much compute the AI consumes.
  • The future of AI is agents with the taste, knowledge, and tools to perform specialized tasks.

If you found this episode interesting, please like, subscribe, comment, and share!

Want even more?

Sign up for Every to unlock our ultimate guide to prompting ChatGPT. It’s usually only for paying subscribers, but you can get it here for free.

To hear more from Dan Shipper:

Subscribe to Every: https://every.to/subscribe

Follow him on X: https://twitter.com/danshipper

Links to resources mentioned in the episode:

Guillermo Rauch: @rauchg

Vercel: https://vercel.com/

Last week’s episode with Nabeel Hyatt: 🎧 The Venture Capitalist Who Finds the Best AI Products—Before They Win

Dan’s essay about the allocation economy: The Knowledge Economy Is Over. Welcome to the Allocation Economy

  continue reading

66 episodes

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