Legal Tech StartUp Focus Podcast
You do not need a computer science degree to build something genuinely useful for legal work, but you do need a clear problem and the willingness to experiment. That’s why I invited Matt Pollins (Lupl, https://www.lupl.com/) and Alex Baker (Legal Tech Collective, https://www.legaltechcollective.com) to talk about vibe coding and what it means when software can be built with natural language instead of traditional programming. We unpack the definition of vibecoding and why the term now covers a wide spectrum, from non-technical beginners to seasoned engineers who increasingly “manage” AI agents that generate most of the code. Then we bring it back to the real world of practicing lawyers: how prototyping helps you understand AI, APIs, and agents faster than reading hot takes online, and how small “micro apps” can eliminate repetitive grunt work, speed up delivery, and improve client service without replacing professional judgment. We also go deep on Vibecode.law (https://vibecode.law/, the project Matt and Alex built to bring balance to a polarized conversation. You’ll hear what’s inside Vibe Academy, how the project showcase helps lawyers learn from each other, and why vibathons can be a practical way for law firms, universities, and even clients to build together. Along the way, we talk about legal tech workflow gaps, work management, security and rollout realities, and why legal education needs to catch up. If you’re curious about legal tech, law firm innovation, AI tools for lawyers, or how to turn a nagging workflow problem into a working prototype, hit play, share this with a colleague, and leave a review so more builders can find the show.
85 episodios
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