I’ve been on teams where “vibe coding” was fun at first, but eventually the codebase becomes unmanageable. Onboarding new devs is painful, small changes break things, and productivity tanks.
I just came across a tool that’s about to launch called VibeCleaner, which focuses specifically on tidying up messy vibecoded software. The pitch is simple: make your code clean and scalable so your team can stop fighting chaos.
They’re opening a waitlist, and early sign-ups get 50% off the first month. Could be worth it if you’re staring down a vibecode mess.
I’ve been on teams where “vibe coding” was fun at first, but eventually the codebase becomes unmanageable. Onboarding new devs is painful, small changes break things, and productivity tanks.
I just came across a tool that’s about to launch called VibeCleaner, which focuses specifically on tidying up messy vibecoded software. The pitch is simple: make your code clean and scalable so your team can stop fighting chaos.
They’re opening a waitlist, and early sign-ups get 50% off the first month. Could be worth it if you’re staring down a vibecode mess.
Yeah. No. They are aware as well, more than anyone else, that the privacy abuses aren’t the sort that they care about in terms of their science. And most of the major news about these came out only relatively recently. FB was a Science desert well b4 that.