I’ve followed BetaList and similar directories for years, and I regularly read side-project posts here on Hacker News.
With the explosion of AI coding assistants, I expected a noticeable increase in useful small SaaS tools and practical software. But honestly, I’m not sure I see it.
HN users have always built impressive things. One example I remember: a developer who quickly built a simple website to help his family find COVID vaccine appointments, it cost about $50 to build. Stories like that show how many practical builders are here.
Yet even with AI making coding easier, the quantity (and quality) of useful tools doesn’t seem to have increased dramatically.
It reminds me of this line from Charles Bukowski:
"but as God said,
crossing his legs,
I see where I have made plenty of poets
but not so very much
poetry."
Sometimes it feels like a modern version might read:
"as VC-backed tech said,
sitting on their laurels,
I see we created a lot of AI hype
and vibe-coding platforms
but not so much
useful software."
What do you think the real bottleneck is now? Ideas, distribution, taste, persistence; or something else?
Vibe coding lowered the barrier to shipping code, but it didn't lower the barrier to shipping value. The result is a lot of technically impressive things that nobody needed. The first comment here (lots of tiny personal tools that never get released) is actually the realistic picture: most of what gets built with AI tools is either too narrow to scale or not quite right for anyone but the builder.
The missing discipline is customer value validation — which is why it's the first principle of the Agile Vibe Coding Manifesto (https://agilevibecoding.org): "Acceleration in development must translate into validated customer value. Speed without value is waste." That sounds obvious but it gets skipped constantly when AI makes spinning up new projects so effortless.
The real unlock will be when people pair AI-generation speed with the harder work of understanding user problems before building.