
One year ago, "vibe coding" meant asking AI to build you a landing page. This week it means something completely different. Let's find out why.
TDLR:
The AI Everything Machine π€
Replit Rewrote the Rules π¨
The Open Claw Race π
The Bigger Picture π
The Bro's Take π€

Perplexity just launched Computer for Enterprise.
Not a chatbot. Not a search tool. A platform that runs multi-step workflows across research, coding, and design, connecting to 400+ enterprise apps including Slack.
You don't tell it what to do. You describe a goal. It makes a plan, spins up agents and sub-agents, and executes. For hours. Or months.
The kicker? They built it internally first. Their head of business called it "the single biggest productivity unlock in our entire company history."
Usage-based pricing too, not per seat. Because generating a video costs nothing like generating a 40-page report. Finally someone gets it.
Agent 4 dropped and Paul Graham called it a genuine paradigm shift.
He's not wrong.
Replit went from "coding with some AI tacked on" to a fully integrated creative canvas. Sites, slides, apps, videos. Multiple people working on the same file simultaneously. Multiple tasks running in parallel, not queued up one by one.
You want to update fonts, ship a new feature, and rewrite the copy at the same time? Done.
Latent Space put it best: now that software engineering is approximately solved, coding platforms have nowhere to go but up the stack.
Perplexity also announced Personal Computer. Always on. Runs locally on a Mac Mini. Access to your files, apps, and sessions from anywhere.
Sound familiar? It's their answer to OpenAI's operator.
Everyone is racing to put a persistent agent inside your machine with access to everything. Security is the pitch. Winning your local environment is the real goal.
The Mac Mini just accidentally became the hottest piece of AI hardware on the market. Apple did not plan this. π
Three things are colliding right now:
Blended canvases. Chat is just one input. The interface is becoming everything at once.
Persistent context. Agents with permanent access to your systems solve the memory problem that has held them back.
Multiplayer agents. It's no longer one agent per person. It's teams of agents, shared across teams of humans.
The pivot is also changing. Perplexity was written off two months ago. Now they're back. Not because they made better search. Because they were comfortable burning the old product and building something new.
That speed of reinvention is the new competitive advantage.
Building something onchain?
Letβs talk. TMB Labs is now offering full-stack growth support for blockchain, AI and social app projects.
Partnerships, strategy, content, socials, and more ππ½
We don't know what the final form of agentic interaction looks like yet. Perplexity Computer and Replit Agent 4 are glimpses, not the answer.
But the direction is clear. Coding agents solved coding. Now they're coming for everything else.
The question is not whether your workflow gets automated. It's whether you're the one building the agent that does it.
And that's it for today! Thanks for reading β₯οΈ
Explore all our social links on our website: https://link3.to/trustmebroshow
Dive in and connect with us!

One year ago, "vibe coding" meant asking AI to build you a landing page. This week it means something completely different. Let's find out why.
TDLR:
The AI Everything Machine π€
Replit Rewrote the Rules π¨
The Open Claw Race π
The Bigger Picture π
The Bro's Take π€

Perplexity just launched Computer for Enterprise.
Not a chatbot. Not a search tool. A platform that runs multi-step workflows across research, coding, and design, connecting to 400+ enterprise apps including Slack.
You don't tell it what to do. You describe a goal. It makes a plan, spins up agents and sub-agents, and executes. For hours. Or months.
The kicker? They built it internally first. Their head of business called it "the single biggest productivity unlock in our entire company history."
Usage-based pricing too, not per seat. Because generating a video costs nothing like generating a 40-page report. Finally someone gets it.
Agent 4 dropped and Paul Graham called it a genuine paradigm shift.
He's not wrong.
Replit went from "coding with some AI tacked on" to a fully integrated creative canvas. Sites, slides, apps, videos. Multiple people working on the same file simultaneously. Multiple tasks running in parallel, not queued up one by one.
You want to update fonts, ship a new feature, and rewrite the copy at the same time? Done.
Latent Space put it best: now that software engineering is approximately solved, coding platforms have nowhere to go but up the stack.
Perplexity also announced Personal Computer. Always on. Runs locally on a Mac Mini. Access to your files, apps, and sessions from anywhere.
Sound familiar? It's their answer to OpenAI's operator.
Everyone is racing to put a persistent agent inside your machine with access to everything. Security is the pitch. Winning your local environment is the real goal.
The Mac Mini just accidentally became the hottest piece of AI hardware on the market. Apple did not plan this. π
Three things are colliding right now:
Blended canvases. Chat is just one input. The interface is becoming everything at once.
Persistent context. Agents with permanent access to your systems solve the memory problem that has held them back.
Multiplayer agents. It's no longer one agent per person. It's teams of agents, shared across teams of humans.
The pivot is also changing. Perplexity was written off two months ago. Now they're back. Not because they made better search. Because they were comfortable burning the old product and building something new.
That speed of reinvention is the new competitive advantage.
Building something onchain?
Letβs talk. TMB Labs is now offering full-stack growth support for blockchain, AI and social app projects.
Partnerships, strategy, content, socials, and more ππ½
We don't know what the final form of agentic interaction looks like yet. Perplexity Computer and Replit Agent 4 are glimpses, not the answer.
But the direction is clear. Coding agents solved coding. Now they're coming for everything else.
The question is not whether your workflow gets automated. It's whether you're the one building the agent that does it.
And that's it for today! Thanks for reading β₯οΈ
Explore all our social links on our website: https://link3.to/trustmebroshow
Dive in and connect with us!
Your go-to source for AI, Blockchain, and Big Tech. News, creators onchain, and deep dives into the tech shaping our future.
Your go-to source for AI, Blockchain, and Big Tech. News, creators onchain, and deep dives into the tech shaping our future.

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I just dropped a new episode of Unlocking the Future. Vibe coding turned one year old this week. In 12 months it went from "AI builds my landing page" to multi-agent systems running enterprise workflows for months at a time. Two products dropped that nobody is talking about enough. Perplexity built an AI everything machine. Replit burned its own product and rebuilt from scratch. I unpack what this means for how we build, how we work, and who wins the agentic era. Full episode below ππ½ https://pods.media/trust-me-bro/vibe-coding-just-grew-up
Prefer reading? https://paragraph.com/@trustmebroshow/vibe-coding-just-grew-up
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I just dropped a new episode of Unlocking the Future. Vibe coding turned one year old this week. In 12 months it went from "AI builds my landing page" to multi-agent systems running enterprise workflows for months at a time. Two products dropped that nobody is talking about enough. Perplexity built an AI everything machine. Replit burned its own product and rebuilt from scratch. I unpack what this means for how we build, how we work, and who wins the agentic era. Full episode below ππ½ https://pods.media/trust-me-bro/vibe-coding-just-grew-up
Prefer reading? https://paragraph.com/@trustmebroshow/vibe-coding-just-grew-up