@thekitze@peduarte@sottoapp I bought Sotto on December 16, 2025.
That was also the last day I used it.
This morning I installed Raycast V2. Ten minutes later, I uninstalled my licenced Wispr Flow and changed my shortcut to use Raycast Dictation instead.
That says a lot.
@thomaspaulmann I'm seeing this request more and more every day. The market is clearly ready. I bet some prototypes are already being tested in secret... we'll see it sooner than we think!
@plutus Suspension of Services
Effective from 17/12/2025, your e-money account and some associated card services have been suspended.
Regrettably we have taken action to suspend some of these services earlier than the intended date of 24/01/2026. 👏🏼 Plutus...
@hadrien06@Apple_Geek_Actu En français, un billion, c'est 1000 milliards.
Mais la traduction du mot anglais billion, c'est un milliard. 😅
Donc oui, c'est bien 1.2T si on note en anglais.
Is it worth learning coding in 2025?
Here’s my answer:
If you want a one-word answer, skip to the end.
Today, there are no-code, low-code, and full-code tools.
You can build a website without coding using tools like Shopify and WordPress. They’re cost-effective and save time but offer limited customization.
Low-code tools like V0, Bolt, and Lovable also require little to no coding knowledge, but they offer less control over the final product.
Full-code tools like Cursor and Windsurf allow you to create anything, but they still require you to know how to prompt. The code is generated based on your input.
Does this mean you don’t need to learn coding?
Here’s my experience:
I know coding. I started before AI tools existed, but now I don’t write the code myself. Most of it is AI-generated.
The advantage I have is:
I know what to prompt.
I understand each tool’s strengths and weaknesses.
I can assess whether the output is correct.
Learning how to prompt is crucial. You can only get the right answers if you ask the right questions.
In 2023, I wrote X lines of code in 2 hours. Now, I can generate those X lines in 2 minutes.
I’m seeing more code than before, even though I’m writing little to nothing.
The efficiency comes from knowing what to prompt, how to fix errors, and how to work quickly.
You should act like a product manager (PM) who has a junior assistant. The assistant does exactly what you say. So what you say is important.
The only way to understand the limits of these tools is by using them.
(PS: All the tools have free versions, so money is not a factor anymore.)
So, is learning coding in 2025 worth it?
YES!
Without a solid foundation, you’ll generate code, but it won’t be as effective, leading to unnecessary errors and complications.
What do you think? Is coding worth learning in 2025?