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I can’t believe how fast Google vibe coded my first Android app

7.8 relevance
Score Breakdown
technical depth
7
novelty
9
actionability
8
community
6
strategic
8
personal
9

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Demonstrates AI-driven app development, highly actionable.

2026-05-21 general The Verge
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Summary

Google AI Studio enabled the author to build three Android apps in one afternoon by typing prompts—148 words produced a working app in 10 minutes, with Gemini automatically generating features, design mockups, and code. However, the resulting apps were buggy and shallow, and a daily usage limit pushed a paywall after initial free iterations, revealing the gap between rapid prototyping and polished production software.

Key Takeaway

Evaluate Google AI Studio for early-stage Android prototyping, but anticipate paying for extended usage and budget for manual bug fixes and design improvements.

Why it matters

For a solutions architect exploring AI-assisted developer tooling, this demonstrates a radical reduction in the barrier to app creation—prompt-to-phone in minutes—but also underscores the need for human judgment and iterative refinement before deployment.

Full Article

AI Report Tech I can’t believe how fast Google vibe coded my first Android app Google AI Studio does what it says on the tin: prompt to phone, in minutes flat. Google AI Studio does what it says on the tin: prompt to phone, in minutes flat. by Sean Hollister May 21, 2026, 1:00 PM UTC Link Share Gift That’s my own Android app. Bad, yet impressive. Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge Part Of Google I/O 2026: All the news and announcements see all updates Sean Hollister is a senior editor and founding member of The Verge who covers gadgets, games, and toys. He spent 15 years editing the likes of…