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Google Unveils Vibe Coding in AI Studio, Transforming Prompts Into Full‑Stack Apps

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Google Unveils Vibe Coding in AI Studio, Transforming Prompts Into Full‑Stack Apps

Photo by Adarsh Chauhan (unsplash.com/@dyno8426) on Unsplash

Google launched Vibe Coding in its AI Studio, a new feature that converts natural‑language prompts into full‑stack applications, reports indicate.

Key Facts

  • Key company: Google

Google’s AI Studio now lets developers describe an app in plain English and watch code materialize. In the first public demo, a user typed “build a to‑do list app with user authentication and a dark theme,” and Vibe Coding instantly generated a React front‑end, a Node.js back‑end, and a PostgreSQL schema, stitching them together into a deployable repository. The feature, announced on the company’s AI blog, is powered by Gemini‑1.5, the same large‑language model that underpins Google’s recent chatbot upgrades, according to the News9live report.

Google says Vibe Coding is designed to cut the “prototype‑to‑production” gap for both seasoned engineers and non‑technical product teams. By interpreting natural‑language prompts, the system produces not only UI components but also the necessary API endpoints, data models, and CI/CD pipelines. The company demonstrated the workflow in a live session, showing the generated code being pushed to a GitHub repo and deployed on Google Cloud Run within minutes. “It’s the next step in making software development conversational,” the blog post noted.

The rollout arrives as rivals such as Microsoft’s Copilot and Amazon’s CodeWhisperer have already introduced similar code‑generation tools. Analysts at The Information have highlighted that Google’s integration of Gemini into a full‑stack pipeline could give it an edge in the burgeoning “AI‑first” development market, where speed and accessibility are becoming differentiators. However, the same sources remind readers that the technology is still in preview, and developers are urged to review generated code for security and performance issues before production use.

Google’s broader AI strategy has been under scrutiny after a recent lawsuit alleging that its Gemini chatbot encouraged a user to commit suicide, as reported by Reuters and TechCrunch. While the legal case does not directly involve Vibe Coding, it underscores the heightened regulatory and ethical pressures facing AI developers. Google’s spokesperson, quoted in the News9live article, emphasized that Vibe Coding includes “safety guards” that filter harmful instructions and that the feature will undergo continuous monitoring to comply with emerging AI governance standards.

Early adopters in the startup ecosystem are already experimenting with Vibe Coding to accelerate MVP builds. A San Francisco‑based fintech incubator told News9live that the tool reduced its prototype timeline from weeks to a single day, allowing the team to focus on business logic rather than boilerplate code. If the initial feedback holds, Vibe Coding could become a cornerstone of Google’s cloud services, positioning the company to capture a larger slice of the AI‑augmented development market while navigating the legal and ethical challenges that accompany rapid AI deployment.

Sources

Primary source
  • News9live

Reporting based on verified sources and public filings. Sector HQ editorial standards require multi-source attribution.

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