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Citar'Vibe Coder' Who Doesn't Know How to Code Keeps Winning Hackathons in San FranciscoPosted by EditorDavid on Sunday July 06, 2025 @07:34AM from the leader-bored dept.An anonymous reader shared this report from the San Francisco Standard:CitarAbout an hour into my meeting with the undisputed hackathon king of San Francisco, Rene Turcios asked if I wanted to smoke a joint with him. I politely declined, but his offer hardly surprised me. Turcios has built a reputation as a cannabis-loving former professional Yu-Gi-Oh! player who resells Labubus out of his Tenderloin apartment when he's not busy attending nearly every hackathon happening in the city. Since 2023, Turcios, 29, has attended more than 200 events, where he's won cash, software credits, and clout. "I'm always hustling," he said.The craziest part: he doesn't even know how to code."Rene is the original vibe coder," said RJ Moscardon, a friend and fellow hacker who watched Turcios win second place at his first-ever hackathon at the AGI House mansion in Hillsborough. "All the engineers with prestigious degrees scoffed at him at first. But now they're all doing exactly the same thing...." Turcios was vibe coding long before the technique had a name — and was looked down upon by longtime hackers for using AI. But as Tiger Woods once said, "Winning takes care of everything...."Instead of vigorously coding until the deadline, he finished his projects hours early by getting AI to do the technical work for him. "I didn't write a single line of code," Turcios said of his first hackathon where he prompted ChatGPT using plain English to generate a program that can convert any song into a lo-fi version. When the organizers announced Turcios had won second place, he screamed in celebration.... "I realized that I could compete with people who have degrees and fancy jobs...."Turcios is now known for being able to build anything quickly. Businesses reach out to him to contract out projects that would take software engineering teams weeks — and he delivers in hours. He's even started running workshops to teach non-technical groups and experienced software engineers how to get the most out of AI for coding."He grew up in Missouri to parents who worked in an international circus, taming bears and lions..."Saludos.
'Vibe Coder' Who Doesn't Know How to Code Keeps Winning Hackathons in San FranciscoPosted by EditorDavid on Sunday July 06, 2025 @07:34AM from the leader-bored dept.An anonymous reader shared this report from the San Francisco Standard:CitarAbout an hour into my meeting with the undisputed hackathon king of San Francisco, Rene Turcios asked if I wanted to smoke a joint with him. I politely declined, but his offer hardly surprised me. Turcios has built a reputation as a cannabis-loving former professional Yu-Gi-Oh! player who resells Labubus out of his Tenderloin apartment when he's not busy attending nearly every hackathon happening in the city. Since 2023, Turcios, 29, has attended more than 200 events, where he's won cash, software credits, and clout. "I'm always hustling," he said.The craziest part: he doesn't even know how to code."Rene is the original vibe coder," said RJ Moscardon, a friend and fellow hacker who watched Turcios win second place at his first-ever hackathon at the AGI House mansion in Hillsborough. "All the engineers with prestigious degrees scoffed at him at first. But now they're all doing exactly the same thing...." Turcios was vibe coding long before the technique had a name — and was looked down upon by longtime hackers for using AI. But as Tiger Woods once said, "Winning takes care of everything...."Instead of vigorously coding until the deadline, he finished his projects hours early by getting AI to do the technical work for him. "I didn't write a single line of code," Turcios said of his first hackathon where he prompted ChatGPT using plain English to generate a program that can convert any song into a lo-fi version. When the organizers announced Turcios had won second place, he screamed in celebration.... "I realized that I could compete with people who have degrees and fancy jobs...."Turcios is now known for being able to build anything quickly. Businesses reach out to him to contract out projects that would take software engineering teams weeks — and he delivers in hours. He's even started running workshops to teach non-technical groups and experienced software engineers how to get the most out of AI for coding."He grew up in Missouri to parents who worked in an international circus, taming bears and lions..."
About an hour into my meeting with the undisputed hackathon king of San Francisco, Rene Turcios asked if I wanted to smoke a joint with him. I politely declined, but his offer hardly surprised me. Turcios has built a reputation as a cannabis-loving former professional Yu-Gi-Oh! player who resells Labubus out of his Tenderloin apartment when he's not busy attending nearly every hackathon happening in the city. Since 2023, Turcios, 29, has attended more than 200 events, where he's won cash, software credits, and clout. "I'm always hustling," he said.The craziest part: he doesn't even know how to code."Rene is the original vibe coder," said RJ Moscardon, a friend and fellow hacker who watched Turcios win second place at his first-ever hackathon at the AGI House mansion in Hillsborough. "All the engineers with prestigious degrees scoffed at him at first. But now they're all doing exactly the same thing...." Turcios was vibe coding long before the technique had a name — and was looked down upon by longtime hackers for using AI. But as Tiger Woods once said, "Winning takes care of everything...."Instead of vigorously coding until the deadline, he finished his projects hours early by getting AI to do the technical work for him. "I didn't write a single line of code," Turcios said of his first hackathon where he prompted ChatGPT using plain English to generate a program that can convert any song into a lo-fi version. When the organizers announced Turcios had won second place, he screamed in celebration.... "I realized that I could compete with people who have degrees and fancy jobs...."Turcios is now known for being able to build anything quickly. Businesses reach out to him to contract out projects that would take software engineering teams weeks — and he delivers in hours. He's even started running workshops to teach non-technical groups and experienced software engineers how to get the most out of AI for coding.
Voy contestando por orden de lectura, lo digo por si se ha contestado ya (seguro que Benzino, pollo o algún otro compañero ha mencionado algo al respecto).Hace dos semanas estuve cenando con unos amigos. Uno de ellos es jefe de proyecto especializado en automatización de procesos (informáticos) y estaba hasta la coronilla de las alucinaciones que tenía ChatGPT. Parece que Claude es bastante mejor con el tema de la programación, pero no les dejan usarla por un tema contractual. Empezó contándonoslo como una broma pero después de dos preguntas casi acaba echando espuma por la boca. Nos decía que los más juniors se creen programadores por saber hacer un prompt de GPT pero luego no son capaces de detectar las alucinaciones en el código. Prueban por encima, ven que funciona, despliegan y siguiente. Cuando hay fallos, no saben solucionarlos. Estaba hasta el gorro.De momento no pasa mucho porque hay mucho programador senior. Nos vamos a reir mucho en 10 años, cuando este tipo de programación se aplique a TODO (incluídos sistemas médicos) y no haya perros viejos que puedan arreglar los desaguisados.
Zapatero usó al jefe de la Audiencia Nacional para indagar si le investigaban por VenezuelaJosé Ramón Navarro llamó a un juez por indicación del expresidente para conocer detalles de una causa secreta
https://www.eleconomista.es/informalia/famosos/noticias/13451452/07/25/ana-duato-y-su-marido-absueltos-de-fraude-fiscal-mientras-su-asesor-es-condenado-a-80-anos-de-prision.htmlOchenta años al asesor fiscal... no, si al final seré un delincuente no-juvenil, lo que no me dejaron ser mis padres. .