
We have all been there. You are sitting around with friends, maybe after a couple of drinks, and someone says, “You know what would make a great app?” You get excited, you brainstorm features, you maybe even check if the domain name is taken. And then? Nothing happens. The dream dies right there because, well, nobody at the table actually knows how to code. Learning Swift or hiring a developer is expensive and hard, so the idea just gathers dust.
Replit is basically trying to kill that excuse forever
They just dropped a new tool called “Mobile Apps on Replit,” and honestly, it feels like we are finally seeing the real promise of AI. This isn’t just ChatGPT writing a broken Python script for you. This is a tool where you can literally type in plain English – “Make me an app that tracks the top 10 companies by market cap” – and it builds the whole thing. Interface, logic, everything. It even hooks up to Stripe so you can start charging people money immediately. They claim you can go from a text prompt to a live app on the Apple App Store in just a few days. That is wild.
It is no wonder investors are throwing money at this. Rumor has it Replit is eyeing a $9 billion valuation in their next funding round. That is a massive jump from where they were just a few months ago. It reflects this huge explosion in what people are calling “vibe coding.” It’s a funny term, but it fits – you aren’t writing strict instructions anymore; you’re just describing the “vibe” or the outcome you want, and the AI handles the heavy lifting. We have seen it with tools like Cursor and Anthropic’s Claude, which are also pulling in insane revenue numbers.
But here is where things get interesting – and a little bit messy
First off, Apple is still the bouncer at the club. You might be able to generate an app in ten minutes, but you still have to get it past the App Store review team. Apple claims they review 90% of apps within 24 hours, but they are notorious sticklers for privacy and quality. Just because an AI built it doesn’t mean Apple will approve it.
Then there is the scary part: security. A cybersecurity firm called Tenzai recently looked into this and found that apps built by these “vibe coding” agents are often riddled with holes. The AI focuses on making the code work, not necessarily making it safe. It might forget basic stuff like brute-force protection, leaving your shiny new app wide open to hackers. And if you, the “developer,” don’t actually know how to read code, you would never even know the vulnerability exists until it’s too late.
So, while traditional software stocks are taking a hit because everyone thinks AI will replace developers, the reality is a bit more nuanced. We are definitely entering a new era where building software is as easy as sending a text message, but we are also potentially flooding the world with apps that might be a little… fragile. It’s an exciting time to be an idea guy, but maybe a terrifying time to be a security auditor.

