May 1st, Workers’ Day: Reflecting on the Future of Developers in the Age of AI

Every May 1st, we celebrate Workers’ Day a moment to recognize the hard work, progress, and dignity of people across every profession. Traditionally, it’s a day to honor laborers, craftsmen, and knowledge workers alike.

Today, in 2025, it’s worth asking: What does Workers’ Day mean for developers, engineers, and tech builders when AI is rewriting the rules of work?

Software development once a purely manual craft is being transformed. AI coding assistants, automated testing, and AI-driven architecture design are fundamentally reshaping what “developer work” looks like.

This shift is both exciting and unsettling. And on a day meant to honor workers, it’s important to pause, reflect, and imagine the future of our profession.


Developers and the Changing Nature of Work

Writing software has historically been seen as highly skilled, highly manual labor an exercise in translating human logic and creativity into machine instructions. It’s an intellectual craft.

But the arrival of advanced AI tools like GitHub Copilot, ChatGPT, and autonomous coding agents is shifting where the true value lies:

  • Repetitive coding is being automated.
  • Simple application patterns are being commoditized.
  • Technical excellence is being augmented and sometimes replaced by strategic and creative excellence.

Just as factory workers once faced automation during the industrial revolutions, developers today are facing an “intellectual automation” wave. The tasks that defined junior and even mid-level engineering roles are changing fast.


AI Is Not Eliminating Developers. But It’s Redefining Them

There’s a common fear that AI will “replace” developers.

That’s not exactly what’s happening.

Instead, AI is redefining the developer’s role:

  • From a pure code generator → to a system designer and critical thinker.
  • From solving known problems → to exploring unknown problems.
  • From typing faster → to asking better questions.

The core of great software development will become less about how many lines of code you can write, and more about:

  • How clearly you understand the problem.
  • How creatively you design the solution.
  • How effectively you validate assumptions with real users.

In short: technical execution is being democratized, but insight, creativity, and judgment are becoming even more valuable.


Workers’ Rights and Respect in a Post-AI World

Workers’ Day isn’t just about jobs, it’s about dignity, fairness, and the value of human effort.

As AI reshapes engineering, companies, leaders, and communities must ensure that:

  • Developers are given opportunities to reskill and evolve.
  • Workplaces value critical thinking and creativity over brute-force output.
  • Workers are recognized for their judgment, leadership, and empathy, not just their typing speed.

The dignity of developer work must evolve but it must not disappear.

The risk is that companies, chasing efficiency, might treat developers like “AI supervisors” or “prompt engineers” only undervaluing the strategic, human essence of great engineering work.

This May 1st, we should celebrate not just what developers do but how they think, imagine, and create.


The Future of Developer Work: What Matters Now

So, if you’re a developer, or leading a tech team, what skills and mindsets will matter most in the future?

1. Product Thinking
Understanding user needs, business goals, and the “why” behind the “what” will be essential.

2. Critical Reasoning
Knowing when AI-generated code is wrong, incomplete, or misaligned with real-world requirements.

3. Creativity and Innovation
Thinking beyond what’s obvious. AI can suggest patterns, but it can’t invent bold new paradigms yet.

4. Collaboration and Empathy
Working with designers, PMs, stakeholders, and users will become even more central.

5. Strategic Use of AI
Knowing how to use AI, when to trust it, and when human judgment must take over.


A New Kind of Craftsmanship

In many ways, the evolution we’re living through isn’t the end of craftsmanship in software, it’s a renaissance.

The tools have changed. The basic tasks have changed. But the core spirit of the developer the builder, the solver, the creator remains vital.

If anything, AI makes the human parts of engineering even more valuable:

  • Vision.
  • Judgement.
  • Ethical thinking.
  • Originality.
  • Connection to human needs.

That’s worth celebrating this Workers’ Day and fighting for in the years ahead.


Final Thoughts: Building the Future Intentionally

This May 1st, let’s honor developers not for how fast they can code but for how thoughtfully they can shape the future.

Let’s champion workplaces that invest in human skills, not just AI tools.

And let’s remember that while technology evolves, the heart of work the pursuit of meaning, the quest to make things better remains uniquely, beautifully human.


Need help preparing your tech team for the AI era?

I help companies and teams rethink their product strategies, evolve their engineering practices, and align AI innovation with real-world user needs.

With 20+ years of experience across tech, fintech, and startup ecosystems, I can help your organization:

  • Embrace AI smartly and strategically
  • Foster product thinking across engineering
  • Future-proof your development practices

📩 Contact me here or visit ivanturkovic.com to learn more.

Let’s build a smarter, more human-centered future together.

AI Can Write Code. But Can It Build the Right Product?

AI is changing how we write code. But there’s a critical question not enough teams are asking:

Is it helping us build the right thing?

From GitHub Copilot to ChatGPT and beyond, the latest AI tools are letting engineers generate code faster than ever before. But faster coding doesn’t automatically mean better outcomes. It just means we get to the wrong destination quicker unless we rethink how we build.

If you’re a founder, CTO, engineer, or investor, this shift matters. Because in this new landscape, the real competitive edge isn’t AI-enhanced productivity. It’s clarity of vision, deep user understanding, and ruthless focus on solving the right problems.


AI Code Generation: Speed Boost or Strategy Trap?

The appeal of AI tools is obvious. With a few prompts or autocomplete suggestions, entire functions materialize. Repetitive boilerplate disappears. Developers feel empowered, moving quickly and staying in flow.

But what are they building?

The reality is: most teams don’t fail because they can’t ship fast enough. They fail because they’re solving problems no one cares about.

“AI just helps you build the wrong thing faster if you’re not thinking critically about what matters.”

In a sense, AI has become the new baseline. It’s like cloud infrastructure everyone has access to it. It’s not the edge. It’s the new floor. And once everyone has the same tools, what matters most isn’t how fast you build but what you choose to build.


Why Product Thinking Beats Faster Coding

Imagine two teams building similar features. One is using AI to crank out code at lightning speed. The other spends time talking to users, validating assumptions, and only writing code when it’s clear what matters most.

Which one wins in the long run?

The second team. Every time.

Great companies aren’t made by productivity alone. They’re built by making smarter bets.

There are already countless stories of AI-powered engineering orgs that pushed out entire platforms only to discover they’d misread the market or misunderstood the user. The cost of wrong decisions compounds faster when you’re building faster.

Insight: Your AI stack isn’t your differentiator. Your user understanding is.


Engineering Without Context Is a Risk and AI Just Amplifies It

One of the most overlooked risks of AI in development is that it can further isolate engineers from the real-world problems their users are facing.

Here’s how it plays out:

  • AI makes coding easier and faster.
  • Engineers get deeper into flow states.
  • Less time is spent in discovery, user feedback, or product discussions.
  • Features are built from assumptions, not insights.

In short, AI widens the gap between builders and users, unless leaders intentionally close it.

Your engineers don’t need to be product managers. But they do need context:

  • Who are we solving for?
  • What pain are we addressing?
  • What does success look like for the user?

Without that, they’re just solving technical puzzles. And AI makes that even easier to do without questioning the why.


AI Strategy Is Not Product Vision: Lessons for CTOs and Founders

In 2025, one of the most common strategic mistakes I see from tech leadership is confusing “having an AI strategy” with “having a product vision.”

CTOs and founders proudly proclaim their AI initiatives, touting LLM integrations and Copilot productivity gains. But often, the product itself lacks a core value proposition. There’s no unique insight. No user obsession. Just surface-level tech hype.

Warning sign: If your AI roadmap is longer than your product roadmap, you’re probably heading in the wrong direction.

AI should support your vision, not become it. It’s a tool to accelerate clarity not a substitute for it.


How Smart Teams Use AI in Product Development

So how should high-performing teams approach AI?

They don’t ignore it. But they use it intentionally, not reactively. Here’s how they do it:

  • Start with product clarity: AI gets plugged in after the problem is well understood.
  • Use AI to prototype, not finalize: It’s a great tool for drafts, ideas, and quick iterations, but not for skipping over design thinking.
  • Build user feedback loops into engineering: Teams that talk to users frequently make better use of AI because they know what’s actually needed.
  • Avoid cargo culting AI features: Just because you can plug in an LLM doesn’t mean you should.

A simple framework for alignment:

  1. Write a 1-page problem brief before building.
  2. Identify the user pain, not the feature.
  3. Validate with a real customer, not a teammate.
  4. Use AI to build faster once the path is clear.

What Investors Should Really Look For

If you’re an investor evaluating AI-native startups, this part is for you.

Don’t just look at AI usage. That’s table stakes. Instead, dig deeper:

  • Are they solving a real user problem with a compelling insight?
  • Is the team obsessed with learning, not just launching?
  • Are engineers looped into product and customer conversations?
  • Is AI being used for leverage, or as a distraction?

The best startups in the AI era won’t be those with the flashiest demos. They’ll be the ones with:

  • Small teams.
  • Sharp thinking.
  • Deep user insights.
  • Relentless focus.

In an AI World, Thinking Is Your Edge

AI is raising the average. It’s making every developer a little more productive. It’s removing drudge work and unlocking new workflows.

But it’s not a silver bullet.

The teams that will truly win in this era are the ones that combine AI with critical thinking, product obsession, and strategic clarity.

They’ll ask better questions. They’ll build less but better. And they’ll move faster because they know exactly where they’re going.

So, how is your team using AI?
To generate more code or to make smarter decisions about what to build in the first place?


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Let’s Build Smarter, Not Just Faster

AI isn’t going away. But how we use it and what we choose to build with it will define which teams win and which ones waste time.

If you’re a founder, CTO, or product leader trying to navigate this new AI-powered world, and you’re serious about building the right product, I can help.

I bring over 20 years of experience across fintech, crypto, payments, and startup ecosystems as a developer, CTO, and product strategist. I’ve helped teams go from messy ideas to crystal-clear roadmaps and scalable platforms.

🔧 What I help with:

  • Defining product strategy in AI-heavy contexts
  • Aligning engineering teams with real user needs
  • Avoiding technical overbuild and feature bloat
  • Building lean, fast-moving MVPs with Ruby on Rails and modern stacks
  • Coaching tech teams to think product-first, code-second

If you want clarity, speed, and smarter decisions baked into your product and engineering culture, let’s talk.

📩 Get in touch with me or visit ivanturkovic.com to learn more.

Let’s build something that matters.

AI “Vibe” Coding Will Increase Demand for Software Engineers; Here’s Why

Today, my LinkedIn feed was overflowing with hot takes about AI and the future of programming. A recurring theme? That AI will make software engineers obsolete. No-code platforms, AI-assisted builders, and vibe-based coding were all being hailed as the future.

Here’s my take:
AI is about to increase the demand for software engineers — not replace them.

And we’ve seen this kind of thing before.


The Swedish Renovation Effect

Years ago in Sweden, a popular TV show demonstrated how easy it was to renovate your own house. Enthused by what they saw, thousands of Swedes began renovating their homes on their own.

The result?
Disaster. Half-done kitchens. Electrical fires. Poorly installed plumbing.

And what followed was a massive surge in demand for professional carpenters, electricians, and contractors.

AI-powered programming is heading down the same path. We’re about to see lots of excited builders — and just as many messes to clean up.


What Is “Vibe” Coding?

“Vibe” coding is the idea that you can build software by simply describing what you want in natural language.

“Make me an app that helps me track my fitness and suggests recipes.”

And boom — AI tools like ChatGPT, GitHub Copilot, or Replit Ghostwriter produce working code.

But building something functional isn’t the same as building something reliable. AI can’t:

  • Ensure secure architecture
  • Integrate across complex systems
  • Handle scaling issues
  • Manage technical debt
  • Think critically about edge cases and long-term impact

That’s where skilled software engineers step in.


Real Examples of Where Engineers Will Still Be Needed

Let’s go through three common scenarios that show why engineers aren’t going anywhere.

1. The Startup Founder MVP

A non-technical founder uses AI to create a prototype. It works and gains users. But now they need:

  • API design that scales
  • Data security and privacy compliance
  • Frontend polish and accessibility
  • DevOps for deployment pipelines and monitoring

They’ll be hiring engineers soon.

2. The Corporate DIY Tool

A marketing team builds an internal dashboard with AI. It’s fast — until:

  • Traffic grows and it starts crashing
  • Security holes appear
  • It can’t integrate with enterprise systems

Enter: The IT and engineering team to fix and rebuild it.

3. The Indie Hacker Problem

An indie developer builds a cool tool with AI and gets traction. Now users want new features. Stripe integration is flaky. Bugs start piling up.
Suddenly, vibe coding hits its limits — and real development work begins.


Just Like Excel… But Bigger

We’ve seen this before with Excel. Millions use it for complex calculations, planning, and even pseudo-apps. But when the stakes rise — in finance, logistics, or reporting — companies bring in:

  • Excel consultants
  • VBA programmers
  • Business analysts

The same will happen with AI-built software. It’ll democratize access, but it’ll also raise expectations.


Engineers Will Be the New Advisors, Builders, and Maintainers

Software engineers in the AI age won’t just code. They’ll:

  • Audit AI-generated systems
  • Refactor MVPs into production-ready platforms
  • Coach teams on maintainability and design thinking
  • Design better APIs and AI integration points
  • Create guardrails and tooling that make AI-generated code safer and smarter

In other words: we’ll be more important than ever.


AI Is the New Hammer — But You Still Need Builders

AI coding tools are like giving hammers to the world.

Some people will build amazing things. Others will build something that looks good but falls apart in the rain.

And just like the Swedish renovation boom, someone will need to fix, maintain, and scale all that newly built infrastructure.

That someone is you — the software engineer.


About the Author

Ivan Turkovic is a seasoned tech expert, fintech and blockchain platform architect, and former CTO of multiple startups. With 20+ years of experience building products and teams using Ruby on Rails, TypeScript, and cloud-native platforms, he helps businesses turn complex systems into reliable, scalable solutions.

Whether you’re an early-stage founder, a company struggling with technical debt, or a team trying to level up your AI integration strategy — Ivan can help.

🖥️ Visit ivanturkovic.com for more articles, insights, and contact info
📧 Reach out via LinkedIn or email ivan.turkovic@gmail.com

The Age of AI: Why Experienced Tech Architects and CTOs Are More Crucial Than Ever

Artificial intelligence is transforming industries at an unprecedented pace, redefining the way we design, develop, and deploy products. However, with great power comes great responsibility. As AI automates more processes and decision-making, the need for thoughtful product design, robust security, and meticulous attention to edge cases has never been more critical.

While AI can handle vast amounts of data and make predictions, it lacks human intuition. The real challenge for companies leveraging AI is ensuring that the technology is implemented in a way that minimizes risks while maximizing efficiency and accuracy. This is where experienced tech architects and CTOs come in. Their deep understanding of system design, security, and data modeling is becoming a key differentiator in creating AI-powered products that are reliable and resilient.

The Increasing Complexity of AI-Driven Product Design

Unlike traditional software, AI-driven products require a fundamentally different approach to design and development. Instead of writing explicit rules for every scenario, AI models learn from data, which introduces new challenges in predicting behavior, handling unexpected cases, and preventing security vulnerabilities.

One of the biggest challenges is handling edge cases. AI models are trained on data, but real-world applications often introduce unexpected situations that weren’t part of the training set. A lack of foresight in handling these cases can lead to significant issues. Consider these examples:

  • Self-driving cars: AI systems are trained on millions of traffic scenarios, but rare or unusual events (like an overturned truck or a person walking with an unusual posture) can confuse the system. Tesla’s Autopilot has been criticized for failing in such edge cases, sometimes leading to accidents.
  • AI chatbots: Microsoft’s Tay AI was released in 2016 and quickly turned into a PR disaster when users manipulated it into making racist and offensive statements. The lack of robust content moderation mechanisms exposed the bot’s vulnerability to adversarial manipulation.
  • Healthcare AI: A medical AI model trained primarily on data from Western countries may perform poorly when deployed in regions with different demographic data, leading to incorrect diagnoses or biased treatment recommendations.

To prevent such failures, experienced architects must proactively model possible failure scenarios and ensure that fallback mechanisms are in place. Anticipating these issues requires deep knowledge of system architecture and an understanding of human behavior—qualities that experienced CTOs and technical leaders bring to the table.

Data Modeling: The Foundation of AI Success

AI systems are only as good as the data they are trained on. Poorly modeled data can introduce biases, inaccuracies, and unpredictable behaviors. This is another reason why experienced tech architects are invaluable.

  • Bias in AI systems: Amazon once had to scrap an AI-powered recruiting tool that discriminated against women because it was trained on past hiring data, which was predominantly male. An experienced AI architect would have identified this risk and designed the system to counteract historical biases.
  • Data drift: AI models degrade over time as real-world data changes. If data pipelines aren’t continuously monitored and updated, performance will decline. Google’s AI for identifying diabetic retinopathy struggled when deployed in real-world clinics because the image quality was lower than in its training dataset.
  • Scalability challenges: AI models that work well in development often fail at scale due to inefficient data pipelines. A well-designed architecture ensures that data ingestion, preprocessing, and storage can handle increasing loads without performance bottlenecks.

Tech architects who understand data engineering, pipelines, and real-time processing can build more resilient AI systems that stand the test of time.

Security and Data Privacy: A Major Concern in AI Systems

One of the biggest risks with AI-driven systems is security and data privacy leaks. Companies without experienced leadership often underestimate the attack surface that AI systems create. Some high-profile failures include:

  • Samsung’s AI mishap (2023): Employees used ChatGPT for internal coding assistance, accidentally leaking sensitive source code. The lack of internal security policies and oversight allowed this breach to happen.
  • Deepfake abuse: AI-generated deepfakes have been used for identity fraud, political misinformation, and even scams impersonating executives. Companies need AI-specific security measures to detect and prevent such misuse.
  • GDPR violations: AI models that store or process personal data without clear consent can lead to massive fines. Meta (Facebook) has faced repeated regulatory scrutiny for mishandling user data.

Experienced CTOs and security-focused architects play a vital role in identifying potential AI security risks before they become major breaches. This includes designing secure data pipelines, implementing differential privacy techniques, and ensuring AI models do not memorize sensitive information.

Why Experienced CTOs and Tech Architects Will Thrive

AI is reducing the need for repetitive coding, but it is increasing the demand for high-level system thinking, security awareness, and strategic planning. Companies that blindly rely on AI without understanding its risks are setting themselves up for failure.

The future belongs to tech leaders who can:

  • Design AI-powered systems that handle edge cases gracefully.
  • Build scalable and unbiased data models.
  • Prioritize security and data privacy in every AI-driven product.

While junior developers and AI automation can accelerate coding and prototyping, only experienced architects can prevent catastrophic failures before they happen. As AI continues to reshape industries, those with deep technical expertise will be in higher demand than ever.

If you’re a CTO or tech architect, now is the time to double down on your expertise. AI is not replacing your role—it’s making it more valuable than ever.

Looking for Expert Help? Let’s Work Together!

If you need expert guidance to bring your ideas to life, I’m here to help. Whether it’s building innovative solutions, refining your tech strategy, or tackling complex challenges, let’s connect and create something great. Reach out today on ivan.turkovic@gmail.com, and let’s make things happen!

The Inevitable Churn of AI-Powered Development Platforms

AI-powered development tools like Lovable, Bolt, and others have captured the imagination of developers and non-developers alike. The promise? Build complete applications with just a few prompts. The reality? A much harsher learning curve, hidden complexities, and an eventual realization that these tools, while powerful, are not yet capable of fully replacing traditional software engineering.

The Hype: Why AI-Powered Development Feels Revolutionary

There’s a reason why so many are flocking to AI-powered coding platforms. They offer something unprecedented—turning natural language descriptions into working code, reducing development time, and making software engineering more accessible to those without deep programming knowledge.

For a while, it seems magical. With just a few prompts, a prototype can be generated, UI components materialize, and APIs are wired up. For solo entrepreneurs, product managers, and designers who have always relied on engineers to bring their ideas to life, AI-powered development tools feel like an emancipation. They provide the illusion of democratization, allowing anyone to create software—until they hit the brick wall of reality.

The Reality: Why These Tools Are Not Enough (Yet)

Building a functional app is not just about writing code. It involves architecture, performance optimization, security, state management, backend integrations, database design, debugging, and deployment. These aspects of software development are where AI-generated code often struggles or outright fails.

Many, myself included, have tried to build and deploy simple applications using these AI tools, only to run into major roadblocks:

  • Database Connection Issues: AI-generated code frequently struggles with database connections, especially when dealing with cloud environments, ORMs, or different types of data persistence strategies.
  • Authentication & Security Concerns: Many platforms generate basic authentication flows, but real-world implementations require fine-tuning for access control, session management, and compliance with security standards.
  • API Integrations & Rate Limits: AI may generate API calls, but it doesn’t always handle edge cases, pagination, throttling, or error responses properly.
  • Frontend Hydration & State Management: AI-generated frontend code often runs into hydration errors, especially in React or other component-based frameworks.
  • CORS Policy Errors & DevOps Challenges: Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) issues plague AI-generated projects, requiring manual intervention. Similarly, deployment is far from a one-click experience, as infrastructure knowledge is often required.

These problems aren’t just annoyances; they are project killers for those without the technical expertise to debug them.

Why Churn is Inevitable

Many people jumping into AI-powered development tools do so because of FOMO (Fear of Missing Out). They see impressive demos and believe they can bypass years of software engineering experience. However, after a few frustrating attempts, reality sets in. Without a foundational understanding of software engineering principles, many will abandon these tools entirely.

Mismatched Expectations

The expectation is that AI will do everything for them. The reality is that AI can accelerate certain aspects of development but cannot (yet) replace the problem-solving skills of an experienced developer. This gap between expectation and reality inevitably leads to frustration and churn.

Lack of Debugging & Support

Unlike traditional development, where countless Stack Overflow threads, GitHub issues, and community discussions exist, AI-generated code can be unpredictable. Debugging issues with AI-generated code often requires real software engineering skills, something many early adopters of these tools do not have.

Dependency on Experts

In my own experience, I only got past these obstacles because I had access to people who actually understand software engineering. Many others won’t have that same support network, making it even more frustrating when things don’t work.

The Future of AI-Powered Development

Despite these challenges, I’m still building with AI and learning a ton. AI-assisted development is undoubtedly the future—but it’s not the present solution many believe it to be. Here’s what needs to happen before these tools can truly democratize software development:

  • Better Abstraction of Complexity: AI tools need to handle real-world complexities like authentication, database management, and security without requiring deep expertise from users.
  • Improved Debugging & Documentation: There must be AI-assisted debugging and more robust documentation around generated code.
  • Integration with Traditional Development Workflows: Instead of aiming to replace engineers, AI tools should become better copilots that assist rather than automate everything.

AI-powered development will continue to evolve, but the current wave of enthusiasm will likely be followed by a period of disillusionment. Many will churn out of frustration, while others—especially those willing to learn and adapt—will reap the benefits of being early adopters.

For now, AI-generated code is a powerful tool, but not a replacement for the art and science of software engineering. The hype is real, but so are the limitations. Those who acknowledge and navigate these challenges will be the ones who truly benefit from this technological shift.

AI vs. Experience: The Real Cost of Knowing What Works

Copy and Paste from AI: $20

Actually Knowing What’s Going to Work: $150,000

Knowing Where to Place It: Priceless

The rise of AI-powered tools has made it easier than ever for people to generate code, write content, and create designs with minimal effort. Platforms like ChatGPT, Copilot, and other AI-driven assistants can spit out working solutions in seconds. But while AI can provide fast results, there’s an undeniable gap between “having code that runs” and “having code that works in the real world.”

Just because something compiles, doesn’t mean it scales. Just because it executes, doesn’t mean it’s secure. And just because AI gives you a function, doesn’t mean it’s the right one for your specific problem.

This is the difference between merely copying and pasting code and actually knowing what will work—and more importantly, where to place it.

In this post, we’ll explore why experience is irreplaceable, the hidden costs of not knowing what you’re doing, and examples of how things can go wrong when you rely solely on AI without the expertise to back it up.


The Trap of “It Works, So It’s Fine”

One of the biggest pitfalls for beginners relying on AI-generated code is assuming that if something works, it must be correct. AI can generate code that runs, but without experience, it’s easy to overlook issues like:

  • Security vulnerabilities
  • Performance bottlenecks
  • Maintainability nightmares
  • Scalability limitations
  • Legal and compliance risks

Here are some real-world examples where blindly trusting AI (or generic code from the internet) can lead to disaster.


Example 1: SQL Injection – The Classic Security Oversight

Let’s say you ask an AI to generate a login system in Python using Flask and SQLite. You get something like this:

@app.route('/login', methods=['POST'])
def login():
    username = request.form['username']
    password = request.form['password']
    query = f"SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = '{username}' AND password = '{password}'"
    result = db.execute(query).fetchone()
    if result:
        return "Login successful"
    return "Invalid credentials"

It works! You enter a username and password, and it checks if they exist in the database. But here’s the problem—this code is vulnerable to SQL injection. Anyone with basic knowledge of security can enter a malicious string like:

' OR '1'='1' --

And suddenly, they’re logged in as an admin.

An experienced developer would know that SQL queries should always use parameterized statements:

query = "SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = ? AND password = ?"
result = db.execute(query, (username, password)).fetchone()

But if you don’t know what to look for, you wouldn’t even realize there’s a problem—until it’s too late.


Example 2: “Just Use This AI-Generated Smart Contract”

With blockchain and smart contracts becoming more popular, AI can generate Solidity contracts for you. But Solidity is tricky—one wrong move and you could introduce vulnerabilities that cost millions.

For example, imagine an AI generates this Solidity contract:

contract SimpleBank {
    mapping(address => uint256) public balances;
    
    function deposit() public payable {
        balances[msg.sender] += msg.value;
    }
    
    function withdraw(uint256 amount) public {
        require(balances[msg.sender] >= amount);
        payable(msg.sender).transfer(amount);
        balances[msg.sender] -= amount;
    }
}

It looks fine, right? But this contract is vulnerable to reentrancy attacks. A malicious actor can drain the contract using a recursive function call before the balance updates. An experienced blockchain developer would immediately see this issue and fix it by using the checks-effects-interactions pattern or a reentrancy guard.


Example 3: The Nightmare of Scaling Bad Code

An AI can generate a sorting algorithm for you. But let’s say you need to process millions of data points efficiently. An AI might give you something like:

def sort_list(lst):
    return sorted(lst)

For small datasets, this works fine. But what if you’re sorting billions of records? An experienced developer would ask:

  • What’s the computational complexity of this approach?
  • Is there a more efficient algorithm like Merge Sort, Quick Sort, or even a parallelized approach?
  • How does this impact memory usage?
  • Should I use a database index instead of sorting in memory?

AI won’t always make those considerations for you. Without experience, you might not even realize there’s a problem—until your system grinds to a halt under real-world loads.


Why Experience Is Priceless

The AI tools available today are powerful, but they are not a replacement for deep expertise. The ability to:

  • Anticipate edge cases
  • Understand security implications
  • Optimize for performance and scalability
  • Write maintainable code
  • Know the right architecture for the problem

…is something that only comes with experience. AI can be an incredible assistant, but it won’t teach you intuition. It won’t tell you what’s actually going to work in production. It won’t warn you when something is subtly broken.

No Easy Coding in AI: The Most Common Mistakes and How to Improve Yourself

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has revolutionized software development, making it faster and more efficient. However, many developers still struggle with AI coding tools, often making mistakes that lead to frustration, inefficiencies, and broken codebases. In this guide, we’ll explore the best practices for AI-assisted coding, focusing on the most common mistakes and how to improve your workflow.

1. No Planning

Jumping straight into coding without a plan is a recipe for disaster. A well-thought-out plan can save hours of debugging and restructuring later.

My Planning Hack

I turn on ChatGPT voice and have a one-on-one conversation about what I want to build. After 15 minutes, I ask:

“Write me a well-structured draft on all the things we’ve finalized in this conversation.”

This way, I use AI as my:

  • Brainstorming buddy
  • Critique
  • Web researcher
  • Draft writer

The result? A one-page document outlining the core features of my MVP.

Don’t build blindly. Plan before you hunt.

2. No Knowledge Base for AI Models

AI coding models work best when they have a reference point. Reducing hallucinations and irrelevant code generation requires a structured knowledge base.

How to Build a Knowledge Base for AI Coding Models

After drafting my idea, I create structured documentation:

  • Product Requirements Document (PRD) – What the app does
  • App Flow Document – How users interact with the app
  • Tech Stack Document – The technologies being used
  • Frontend Guidelines – UI/UX rules
  • Backend Structure – API architecture and database schema

This documentation acts as a reference, ensuring AI models generate relevant and accurate code. Learn more about AI Documentation

3. Not Picking the Right Tools

Every AI coding tool has its own superpower. Choosing the wrong tool can lead to inefficiencies.

AI Coding Tool Comparison:

ToolStrengthsWeaknesses
ChatGPT-4General-purpose coding, debugging, writing docsMay hallucinate in complex logic
Claude 3.5Excellent for writing and structuring codeNot great for debugging
Gemini Flash 2.0Scanning and refactoring large codebasesLacks execution speed
Cursor/WindsurfAI-powered IDE for smart code executionNeeds AI-specific setup

Check out the best AI coding tools

4. Not Picking the Right Tech Stack

AI models are trained on specific programming languages. Using the right tech stack leads to better quality code with fewer errors.

AI-Friendly Tech Stacks

Frontend

  • Next.js
  • Vite
  • Flask (for Python-based projects)

Database

  • Supabase (PostgreSQL)
  • Firebase

Authentication

  • Clerk.dev
  • Supabase
  • Firebase

AI Models

  • OpenAI
  • Claude
  • Gemini

Best AI-Compatible Programming Languages

LanguageAI Model Effectiveness
PythonExcellent
JavaScript/TypeScriptGreat
RustDecent
RubyLimited (but improving)

5. Not Building Step by Step

Letting AI plan the entire development process often results in messy, unstructured code.

The Fix: My 60-Step Implementation Plan

Instead of letting AI decide everything, I am creating a step-by-step execution plan with 60+ checkpoints to ensure nothing gets skipped. AI should only be used to execute the plan, not to decide what to do next.

6. No Debug Prompting

Debugging AI-generated code can be painful. Use these techniques to improve debugging:

  • Attach the error and say: “Use chain of thought reasoning to find the core issue first and then plan step by step to fix the issue.”
  • Ask AI to “follow best coding practices. Search the web and find the fix for this issue.”
  • Only attach relevant files to improve AI’s focus.

7. Not Using Multiple AI Models

No single AI model can do everything. Use different models for different scenarios:

In Cursor/Windsurf:

  • Claude Sonnet 3.5 → Best for writing and executing code
  • GPT-4 o1/o3-mini-high → Best for debugging complex errors
  • Gemini Flash 2.0 → Best for scanning and updating entire codebases

8. Not Using Starter Kits

Why start from scratch every time? Use boilerplates to speed up development and reduce errors.

I am preparing 4+ pre-built boilerplates specifically designed for AI coding to reduce token usage and avoid unnecessary errors.

9. Quitting Too Early

AI coding is exciting at first, but frustration kicks in when errors start piling up. Expect hundreds of build issues and AI mess-ups.

The Solution:

  • Strong Foundation → Build rules and documentation to keep AI coding structured
  • Version Control → Use Git to manage source code changes effectively Learn more about Git version control

Final Thoughts

AI-assisted coding is powerful, but only if used correctly. By avoiding these common mistakes and applying structured workflows, you can build faster, smarter, and more efficient applications.

Plan before you code. Structure before you execute. Debug with intelligence. Adapt and improve.

Can AI Replace Junior Developers, or Should We Train Them to Become Seniors?

The rapid advancement of AI has sparked an ongoing debate in software development: Should companies replace junior developers with AI-powered tools and a few senior engineers, or should they invest in training juniors to become future seniors while leveraging AI to enhance their productivity?

While both perspectives have merit, the ideal solution is often a balance. A well-structured team that combines the fresh enthusiasm of junior developers with the experience of senior engineers, amplified by AI, can outperform any one-dimensional approach.

The Case for AI Replacing Junior Developers

AI-powered coding assistants like GitHub Copilot, Tabnine, and ChatGPT have dramatically improved code generation, debugging, and even architectural decision-making. These tools allow senior developers to move faster and reduce the need for a large number of junior developers.

Real-Life Example: Stripe

Stripe, a leading fintech company, experimented with reducing its reliance on junior developers by leveraging AI-powered development tools. They streamlined their engineering teams, allowing senior engineers to complete tasks in half the time with AI assisting in boilerplate code, debugging, and automated testing. This helped Stripe reduce costs while maintaining high-quality output.

Pros:

  • Lower payroll costs
  • Faster development cycles
  • Fewer mistakes and more consistent code quality

Cons:

  • No pipeline for future senior developers
  • Loss of diverse perspectives and innovation
  • Higher risk if the senior developer leaves

The Case for Training Junior Developers

On the other hand, investing in junior developers creates long-term sustainability and cultivates a strong company culture. AI should be seen as a tool to accelerate their learning rather than a replacement.

Real-Life Example: Shopify

Shopify has a strong internal development culture that emphasizes mentorship and junior developer growth. They implemented a program where junior developers used AI tools to assist with coding, debugging, and understanding best practices. Within two years, many juniors had transitioned to mid-level roles, reducing hiring costs and increasing team loyalty.

Pros:

  • Builds a pipeline of future senior engineers
  • Encourages innovation and fresh perspectives
  • Creates a collaborative and diverse work environment

Cons:

  • Higher initial training costs
  • Slower development speed in the short term
  • Risk of juniors making mistakes early on

The Ideal Team: A Mix of Juniors, Seniors, and AI

The best-performing teams strike a balance between juniors, seniors, and AI tools. Here’s why:

  • Juniors bring fresh ideas and enthusiasm but lack deep experience.
  • Seniors provide technical leadership and decision-making skills.
  • AI accelerates productivity and helps fill knowledge gaps.

Example: The Hybrid Approach at Supercell

Supercell, a gaming startup, faced a dilemma: Hire more juniors, bring in an expensive senior team, or leverage AI? They opted for a hybrid approach:

  • A few senior developers focused on core architecture and mentoring.
  • Juniors were onboarded with structured training programs and AI-powered coding tools.
  • AI helped automate repetitive tasks, reducing junior mistakes.

After a year, productivity was up 40%, and juniors were significantly more skilled.

How to Start Implementing This Approach

  1. Invest in AI Tools – Provide teams with AI-powered coding assistants, but don’t rely on them blindly.
  2. Create a Structured Training Program – Develop mentorship programs where seniors guide juniors.
  3. Encourage AI-Assisted Learning – Let juniors use AI for debugging and code explanations to accelerate learning.
  4. Pair Programming and Code Reviews – Ensure juniors work alongside seniors to absorb knowledge.
  5. Set Clear Growth Paths – Provide juniors with clear milestones for career advancement.

Conclusion

Rather than replacing junior developers with AI, the smarter approach is to use AI to enhance their growth. Companies that cultivate junior talent will be better positioned for long-term success, while AI can help both juniors and seniors become more productive.

By striking the right balance between automation and human development, teams can maximize efficiency, innovation, and sustainability in the ever-evolving tech landscape.

When Product Owners Ignore Security: Why Experienced Developers Matter

In the modern tech landscape, product owners often assume that software will “just work” safely. But security isn’t automatic, and a lack of foundational understanding can lead to serious vulnerabilities. While AI has become a valuable tool in development, it cannot replace the expertise of seasoned developers who can anticipate, diagnose, and resolve complex security flaws. In this article, we’ll explore why relying solely on assumptions—or even AI—can put users at risk, and how experienced developers have rescued failing projects from disaster.

The Illusion of Safety in Software Development

Product owners, especially those without technical backgrounds, often focus on features, user experience, and business objectives. Security tends to be an afterthought—if it’s considered at all. They might assume:

  • “Our framework handles security automatically.”
  • “AI-generated code must be secure.”
  • “Hackers won’t target us because we’re a small company.”

These assumptions are dangerous. Security must be deliberately designed into a system, and failing to do so can lead to catastrophic breaches.

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Real-World Examples of Projects Gone Wrong (And How Developers Saved Them)

1. The E-Commerce Disaster: Exposed Customer Data

A startup built an e-commerce platform using a popular low-code solution. The product owner assumed that security was baked into the platform. What they didn’t realize was that their database had been left publicly accessible, exposing thousands of customers’ personal and payment data.

How an Experienced Developer Saved It:

A senior developer was brought in after an independent security researcher exposed the vulnerability. The developer:

  • Implemented proper authentication and access controls.
  • Added encryption for stored customer data.
  • Set up automated security testing to prevent future leaks.

Without this intervention, the company would have faced lawsuits and lost customer trust.

2. The AI Code Generator Mistake: Unsecured API Keys

A SaaS company decided to speed up development using AI-generated code. Their AI assistant provided clean-looking API integrations, but it didn’t consider security best practices. The AI-generated code stored API keys directly in the frontend, exposing them to anyone who inspected the browser’s developer tools.

How an Experienced Developer Saved It:

A security-conscious engineer audited the code and:

  • Moved API keys to a secure environment variable setup.
  • Implemented proper authentication (OAuth2) instead of static keys.
  • Set up monitoring alerts for unusual API usage.

The fix prevented potential attackers from hijacking API calls and exploiting user data.

3. The Blockchain Nightmare: A Flawed Smart Contract

A startup launched a DeFi project, assuming that a popular AI tool could generate Solidity smart contracts with minimal oversight. The result? A flawed contract that allowed attackers to drain funds due to a reentrancy bug.

How an Experienced Developer Saved It:

After losing some initial funds, they hired a blockchain security expert who:

  • Refactored the smart contract using best practices.
  • Implemented reentrancy guards to prevent exploit attempts.
  • Conducted thorough security audits before redeploying.

Without an expert, the project could have been completely compromised.

AI is a Tool, Not a Replacement for Expertise

AI-generated code can be helpful, but it lacks real-world context. AI doesn’t understand business logic, legal requirements, or evolving security threats. An experienced developer:

  • Thinks critically about how code will be used (and misused).
  • Understands regulatory compliance (GDPR, PCI-DSS, HIPAA, etc.).
  • Can adapt and apply security measures based on the specific application.

The Takeaway: Invest in Expertise Before It’s Too Late

Security isn’t something that should be bolted on at the end of a project—it should be a core consideration from the start. Product owners must:

  • Consult experienced developers early in the development cycle.
  • Prioritize security just as much as features and user experience.
  • Recognize that AI is a helpful assistant, but not a substitute for human expertise.

Ignoring security can lead to costly breaches, reputational damage, and legal consequences. But with the right developers involved, businesses can build not just functional, but also secure, reliable, and scalable software.


Have You Seen Security Mistakes Firsthand?

What’s the worst security oversight you’ve encountered in a project? Share your experiences in the comments!

The Rise of AI Wrappers: Are AI Providers the New Telecoms?

Artificial intelligence has experienced an explosion of growth in recent years, with companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google leading the charge in providing powerful foundational models. But despite their immense computational capabilities, these AI providers are increasingly finding themselves in a familiar position—one that resembles the fate of telecom giants in the past.

In the telecom industry, infrastructure providers built the backbone of communication networks, yet they eventually found themselves competing not on innovation but on price, reliability, and scale. Meanwhile, a new wave of companies emerged, offering user-friendly interfaces and value-added services on top of these networks, becoming the real consumer-facing brands. Today, a similar pattern is emerging in AI, where a new breed of AI wrappers is rapidly capturing market attention and customer loyalty.

AI Wrappers: The New Kings of the AI Economy

AI wrappers are companies or platforms that use existing AI models but differentiate themselves by offering improved usability, domain-specific expertise, or additional automation capabilities. They act as intermediaries between the raw power of foundational models and the end user, providing a tailored, more accessible experience. These wrappers often build agentic systems that extend AI capabilities beyond simple text generation, integrating AI into real-world workflows more seamlessly.

One of the most notable examples is Cursor, an AI-powered coding assistant that integrates deeply with software development environments. While OpenAI provides the underlying models, Cursor enhances them with context awareness, code-specific optimizations, and user-friendly interactions that cater specifically to developers. Similarly, Jasper has become a dominant force in AI-powered content creation, building atop existing LLMs but fine-tuning the experience for marketing and branding purposes.

Other examples include:

  • Replit Ghostwriter: An AI-powered coding assistant built into the Replit platform, offering features customized for its user base.
  • Notion AI: A productivity tool that integrates AI to help users generate content, summarize notes, and organize information in an intuitive way.
  • Synthesia: A video generation platform using AI-powered avatars and voice synthesis, making it easier for businesses to create professional content without requiring actors or video production expertise.

These AI wrappers add convenience, improve user workflows, and tailor AI capabilities for specific needs—something foundational models alone struggle to do.

Why AI Providers Are Like Telecoms

Telecom providers built the infrastructure that powered the internet, but their value quickly became commoditized. Consumers didn’t buy “bandwidth”—they bought streaming services, social media, and communication apps that provided the real utility. The underlying networks remained essential but largely invisible.

AI is heading down the same path. Foundational model providers like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are in an arms race to create more powerful models, but they face two fundamental challenges:

  1. Differentiation is difficult: At the model level, once competitors catch up in quality, the main differentiator becomes price and API access rather than unique features.
  2. Customer experience is owned by wrappers: Just as customers interact with Netflix rather than their internet provider, most AI users will engage with AI wrappers rather than the underlying models.

Unless foundational AI providers can create a breakthrough that redefines the way AI is used, they will likely remain the equivalent of cloud computing providers—essential but invisible to end users.

Can AI Providers Compete?

AI model creators face a strategic dilemma. Do they continue improving their base models and risk becoming commodities, or do they move up the stack, integrating more directly with users?

There are a few potential paths they could take:

  • Vertical integration: OpenAI, for instance, is already moving in this direction with ChatGPT, aiming to make its own application as sticky as possible. Google has integrated Gemini into its search products, while Anthropic is working on making Claude a more accessible assistant.
  • Exclusive partnerships: By offering custom AI models for select partners, providers can maintain an edge. This strategy mirrors what Nvidia has done with its GPU dominance—selling to cloud providers while also enabling high-performance, exclusive partnerships.
  • Fine-tuned solutions: Rather than offering general-purpose models, AI providers could develop industry-specific solutions for enterprise applications, ensuring they remain a step ahead of generic AI wrappers.

However, even with these efforts, the fundamental shift in value remains: users prefer tailored experiences over raw power, and AI wrappers are best positioned to deliver those experiences.

The Future of AI: Who Wins?

The current trend suggests AI providers will continue building the foundation, but the real profits and brand recognition will go to those who package and distribute AI in a way that users love. AI wrappers are already dominating certain verticals, and as agentic AI systems become more advanced, we will see an even greater separation between infrastructure and experience.

If AI providers fail to adapt, they risk becoming the “AT&T” of the AI age—powerful but replaceable. Meanwhile, the new kings of AI will be the platforms that understand user needs, integrate AI seamlessly, and create interfaces that feel indispensable.

The AI landscape is rapidly shifting, and while foundational models remain crucial, they are no longer the defining factor in AI’s success. The future belongs to those who can bridge the gap between raw AI power and user-friendly experiences. As we move forward, expect more AI wrappers to emerge, reshaping industries and pushing AI providers further into the background.

In the end, AI might power the revolution—but the wrappers will own the kingdom.