Uncapped #20 | Guillermo Rauch from Vercel
Uncapped #20 | Guillermo Rauch from Vercel
Uncapped #20 | Guillermo Rauch from Vercel
Shownote
Shownote
Guillermo Rauch is the founder and CEO of Vercel, creators of v0 which is one of the most popular AI app building tools that’s helping power the online presence of companies like Porsche, Under Armour and Nintendo. In May 2024, Vercel completed a $250M Series E at a $3.25B valuation and was recently named to the Forbes Cloud 100. Originally from Argentina, Guillermo became a self-taught developer at the age of ten, and has been a passionate contributor to the open-source community ever since. He is the mind behind foundational JavaScript frameworks like Next.js and Socket.io, and has built tools that power some of the internet’s most innovative products, including Midjourney, Grok, and Notion.
We covered:
Vercel’s early insights
State of affairs for codegen
Implications of AI for developers
Skills of the future
Product building taste
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Timestamps:
(0:00) Intro
(0:28) Prequel to Vercel
(4:32) Vercel’s early insights
(8:13) State of affairs for codegen
(17:18) Codegen evolution
(19:37) Perceived vs realized productivity
(27:53) Fault attribution
(31:56) Internet being a house of cards
(35:33) When codegen will be exceptional
(40:18) What kids should be learning
(47:42) Chasing the dragon vs listening to customers
(50:46) The next internet
(51:58) Reverse engineering success
(55:50) Making it work as a dad and CEO
(58:14) Taste in building product
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More on Guillermo:
https://vercel.com/
https://x.com/rauchg
More on Jack:
https://www.altcap.com/
https://x.com/jaltma
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https://linktr.ee/uncappedpod
Email: friends@uncappedpod.com
Highlights
Highlights
In this episode, Guillermo Rauch, founder and CEO of Vercel, dives into the evolving landscape of software development, the role of AI in coding, and how the next generation of developers is being shaped. From the origins of Vercel to the future of product building, he shares insights on how technology is transforming both the technical and creative aspects of development.
Chapters
Chapters
Intro
00:00Prequel to Vercel
00:28Vercel’s early insights
04:32State of affairs for codegen
08:13Codegen evolution
17:18Perceived vs realized productivity
19:37Fault attribution
27:53Internet being a house of cards
31:56When codegen will be exceptional
35:33What kids should be learning
40:18Chasing the dragon vs listening to customers
47:42The next internet
50:46Reverse engineering success
51:58Making it work as a dad and CEO
55:50Taste in building product
58:14Transcript
Transcript
Guillermo Rauch: you've been coding for hours and hours, and he didn't even know what the output was. He was just impressed by the fact that someone could be so locked in. And so, I think programming taught me that, it taught me how to focus, it taught me ...
