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At Business Insider, we like to keep you on the cutting edge of innovation and work.Vibe coding marries the two.This new tech — which enables even non-techies to code — is upending assumptions in almost every direction.
That's why we've created a new weekly newsletter on the topic: Vibe Mode. You can sign up here!And there's an awful lot to cover. The prospect that vibe coding will make software companies more replaceable is denting their stocks. It's also stressing private credit, which we're learning has financed some of these businesses. Vibe coding is exciting many software engineers who are bingeing on the new tech and obsessing about all it can help them do.At the same time, it's exhausting engineers who preferred, or at least were used to, earlier ways of working and are mentally fatigued from how these tools are changing coding.It's creating a whole new class of companies, including Lovable, Replit, and Cursor, which are reaching valuations in the multiple billions of dollars.It's concerning C-suite execs who are eager to save money with vibe coding but also are worried about its costs.And it has the Business Insider team hustling to deliver for you on all of these fronts.We've got Shuby Goel covering the pure-play vibe-coding companies and Ben Bergman on the financials from the West Coast. Our tech columnist Alistair Barr has been chronicling the changing software business for months. Meanwhile, Chong Ming Lee has been interviewing users and trying it himself, and Brent Griffiths has been writing about software engineers' highs and lows. Alex Nicoll is on private credit players, and our markets team is deep into the investing angles.You can reach out to any of them with ideas or tips.What are we missing? As always, please reach out at eic@businessinsider.com.
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