Loveable
Vercel has been one of the most confidence-building tools in this process because it made publishing feel understandable rather than intimidating.
It’s aimed at removing all the friction from building with code.It separates you from the need to delve into the code itself, handling a lot of the technical tasks for you and making an easier first step into building your own piece of software.
I use it to explore how far a more guided AI product-building workflow can go, especially when I want to test an idea rapidly without starting from a blank technical setup.
It works well for fast experimentation, simple prototypes and moments where the main goal is to test whether something is worth pursuing further.The other use case is for internal solutions.
The trade-off for speed is usually control. It can be less useful when you want to deeply understand the build itself or make more deliberate structural choices.
Good for people who want to prototype quickly, validate ideas early and reduce the setup overhead of getting started. It is also perfect for those who are keen to get started and aren’t ready to go deep on the code.
Loveable is valuable when speed matters most, but for me it is strongest as an experimentation tool rather than the place I want to learn the deeper mechanics.I purposely chose Codex for the site as I wanted to go on the journey of building from scratch.