I was working on a refactoring using VS Code the other day when I noticed something I hadn't seen before: a tiny bar chart quietly living in the status bar, tracking my AI vs. manual typing usage over the last 24 hours. It's called AI Statistics, and it shipped in VS Code 1.103. To enable it, open settings and search for "AI stats" — flip the checkbox, and a small gauge appears in the bottom-right of your status bar. Hover over it and you get a breakdown: how much of your recent code came from AI completions versus your own keystrokes. On the surface it sounds like a novelty. But I found myself actually pausing when I saw the numbers. It reframed something I hadn't really thought about consciously: not whether AI coding tools are good or bad, but just how much I'm actually leaning on them day to day. That visibility is weirdly valuable. It's the kind of data point that makes you more intentional — maybe you lean in harder on AI for boilerplate an...
Last year Valentine's Day I built a Romantic Movie Generator — an app that turned action movies into sweeping romantic dramas - using AI. Die Hard became a tender love story about a man who just wanted to spend Christmas with his wife. It was fun, it was silly, and it required a surprising amount of hand-holding to get the AI to behave. At that time a colleague took my idea and crafted his own version; Loveflix . This year, my partner made it abundantly clear that another "action movie as romance" project wasn't going to cut it for February 14th. Fair enough. So I did what any reasonable developer does under domestic pressure: I flipped the concept entirely. Built on top of the version from my colleague I created: ActionFlix: turn any rom-com into a high-octane action thriller. Because Love Actually is basically a heist movie if you squint hard enough. Same concept, inverted. Sweet home setup, chaos onscreen. Points successfully gained. But here's ...