Tamez Labs

Cursor vs Claude Code: where the code breaks first

10 min · 14 mei 2026
aflevering Cursor vs Claude Code: where the code breaks first artwork

Beschrijving

Claude Code went so viral over the 2025 holidays that people who had never written a line of code were using it to ship real apps, which is wild until you realize the terminal has a hard ceiling on visual work. Cursor vs Claude Code for a junior dev building a portfolio site in two hours is not even close: Cursor wins because a portfolio is a visual artifact and you cannot iterate on spacing and typography through a terminal prompt and a browser refresh. Both tools will scaffold you something generic in minutes, but neither builds you a portfolio until you bring the taste yourself.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Tamez Labs community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

57 afleveringen

aflevering We shipped a 60 second apparel spot using Google Omni as the heavy lift artwork

We shipped a 60 second apparel spot using Google Omni as the heavy lift

Google just dropped Gemini Omni at I/O 2026 and motion designers are already stress-testing it on real client work — specifically, building a full 60-second branded spot for an indie apparel brand using nothing but Omni and After Effects. The catch is brutal and very real: Omni hard-caps every clip at 10 seconds, slaps a mandatory AI watermark on every export, and has zero native integration with AE, meaning a 60-second deliverable is at minimum six separately generated clips, each transferred by hand. The stateful conversational editing is genuinely new and useful, but whether this two-tool pipeline produces something that reads as craft instead of just content is a question the field cannot answer yet — Omni was barely 72 hours old when designers started finding out.

21 mei 202611 min