March 11th, 2025
Is vibe coding the future?
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welcome to another fine edition of the Leaderboard. In today's issue, we're diving into a tool that organizes developer issue tracking, a plugin that simplifies cross-company meetings, and an app that gives you an in-depth view of your bloodwork. Alongside that, we have a discussion all about vibe-coding.
A breathe of fresh air for devs

Taska is a Mac app designed to bring GitHub and GitLab issue tracking into a dedicated, native workspace. Instead of flipping between browser tabs, Taska keeps everything in one place, letting developers create, edit, and organize tasks more efficiently. It supports quick actions, native macOS integration, and a streamlined interface to help cut down on workflow distractions.
🔥 Our take: Some of us love a clean workflow when it comes to development. Others thrive in absolute chaos. Taska is definitely made for the first group—the kind of devs who have strong opinions about keyboard shortcuts and keep their files perfectly organized. For the rest of us, it might be one of those tools you do not realize you need until you actually use it. Or maybe you will just keep copy-pasting ticket links into your notes app like it is 2015.
The real productivity hack

Clipse is a scheduling tool designed to simplify cross-company meetings by syncing availability across different organizations. Instead of juggling email chains and manually checking calendars, Clipse integrates with existing scheduling tools to create a smoother booking experience. It aims to remove the friction of external meetings, making it as seamless as scheduling with your own team.
🔥 Our take: Everyone talks about improving productivity, but nobody talks about the real time waster, figuring out when everyone is free. Clipse is trying to fix that, which makes sense because no one should have to email three different versions of “Does Tuesday work?” just to get a 30 minute call on the books. If it catches on, it could make scheduling feel like less of a full time job.
Bryan Johnson would be proud

BloodRec is an AI tool that analyzes blood test results and translates them into understandable insights. Instead of sifting through numbers that look like they belong in a physics textbook, it breaks things down in a way that actually makes sense, helping users track their health without needing a medical degree.
🔥 Our take: Bryan Johnson spends millions optimizing his body with hyper-personalized health tracking, but for the rest of us, getting a simple explanation of our blood test results would be a nice start. BloodRec aims to make that easier by decoding your health metrics without requiring a team of doctors. Whether it helps people take control of their health or just fuels a new wave of biohacking obsessions, it is definitely a sign that the quantified self movement is not slowing down.

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Is “vibe coding” with AI actually a thing, or just wishful thinking?

Upcoming: An AMA with PostHog founders, James Hawkins and Tim Glaser. - ask your questions now
AI can generate code, sure, but can it build an entire app without you knowing a thing about software? Dan Leshem, maker of Fine, has been working with non-coders trying to do exactly that, and here’s what he found—the ones who understood basic software concepts were 10x more likely to succeed.
Dan put together a quick roadmap of the must-know basics, from frontend and backend to APIs and databases. The takeaway? You don’t need to be an engineer, but if you can’t explain what you want like you’re talking to a junior dev instead of rubbing a magic lamp, AI is going to struggle.
Tried building an app without code? Think AI can do it all for you?
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