
ChatGPT Saved My Life (No, Seriously, I’m Writing this from the ER)
How using AI as a bridge when doctors aren't available can improve patient-to-doctor communications in real time emergencies

How to Plan an Annual Family Summit
Simple strategies for setting goals and Priorities with Your Partner for the year ahead

How I Used AI to Save My Life in 77 Prompts: A Debrief
Reflecting on best practices, lessons learned, and opportunities to improve AI-assisted medical triage

ChatGPT Saved My Life (No, Seriously, I’m Writing this from the ER)
How using AI as a bridge when doctors aren't available can improve patient-to-doctor communications in real time emergencies

How to Plan an Annual Family Summit
Simple strategies for setting goals and Priorities with Your Partner for the year ahead

How I Used AI to Save My Life in 77 Prompts: A Debrief
Reflecting on best practices, lessons learned, and opportunities to improve AI-assisted medical triage
Share Dialog
Share Dialog



Learning how to build software and apps without being a “classically trained engineer” has been the single-greatest paradigm shift of my career.
It’s what makes me excited, curious, and motivated for what comes next in the AI age. And it’s why I’ve been intentionally setting out to identify emergent builders in the AI age (and teach them how to build ,too). After all, if people like me — who have never before been able to contribute to the technical architecture of the internet — what does that mean for how the way we consume and create software might change over time?
That’s what inspired this episode of Chaos Agents, a new podcast by Sara Chipps and Becca Lewy, who take an outside-in look at the AI revolution, drawing upon their combined experiences growing up in the web2 era.
They invited me to share more about my journey as a developer this year, from how I first got MuseKat in the app store to how I leveled up my own knowledge about coding through 1-1 coaching and a summer spent “pair prompting” to build a second app, Scribblins, in an AI-native way.
You can tune in here:

Learning how to build software and apps without being a “classically trained engineer” has been the single-greatest paradigm shift of my career.
It’s what makes me excited, curious, and motivated for what comes next in the AI age. And it’s why I’ve been intentionally setting out to identify emergent builders in the AI age (and teach them how to build ,too). After all, if people like me — who have never before been able to contribute to the technical architecture of the internet — what does that mean for how the way we consume and create software might change over time?
That’s what inspired this episode of Chaos Agents, a new podcast by Sara Chipps and Becca Lewy, who take an outside-in look at the AI revolution, drawing upon their combined experiences growing up in the web2 era.
They invited me to share more about my journey as a developer this year, from how I first got MuseKat in the app store to how I leveled up my own knowledge about coding through 1-1 coaching and a summer spent “pair prompting” to build a second app, Scribblins, in an AI-native way.
You can tune in here:
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