Claude Cowork, AI hype, and its real impact on white-collar work
Before the holidays, Adam Conner began vibe coding. Like everyone else in the know, he was using Claude Code. Compared to popular chatbots, Anthropic’s advanced AI agent speaks the language of computers: code. Normally, you click buttons in browsers, open folders, and drag files. But you can also do so by coding—interacting with software by typing commands into a terminal, a text-based app.
Claude Code goes beyond such primitive tasks, though: an AI that can code can effectively do nearly anything on a computer.
“We expected developers to use Claude Code for coding, but then something unexpected happened,” an Anthropic spokesperson tells Fast Company. “We started seeing the discovery arc where people would approach Claude Code to tackle a coding task, then have an ‘aha moment’ when they realized it could help with other tasks.”
The result of that ‘aha moment’ is a vibe coding phenomenon that lets developers—and, crucially, non-developers such as Conner—harness the AI agent to write code and create projects that could grow tomato plants, knit sweaters, and build fully fledged iOS apps in hours.
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