Software and AI: The Freedom of Creative Logic
The Beginnings: When Syntax Was Still a Barrier
Few people know this about me, but I majored in math and computer science in high school. Between 9th and 12th grade I was already deeply interested in the world of technology. Back then, Pascal was the curriculum, and I honestly admit that thinking in pseudocode and following rigid syntactic rules was far from my strong suit. What captivated me even then was the internal logic of software, creating operational principles, and system-level design.
The Critic of User Experience
Over the years, I have worked with countless programs, and I have often stood baffled by illogical solutions or unexpected crashes. I often felt as if the basic operating principles of software were driven not by efficiency, but by random ideas.
I have always had a kind of built-in sense for recognizing bugs and anomalies. When I start using a new program, I find its weak points almost immediately, and a more optimal, logical solution is born in my head. There was a video editing software with which I identified so many technical flaws that if the developers had paid a symbolic amount for every bug, I would be living in a marble palace today. Although software quality has improved a lot in the last 15 years, you can still encounter decades-old anomalies today that developers ignore for some reason.
The Breakthrough: Programming in Natural Language
The turning point came in 2024, when I discovered AI-supported development. It was a relief that syntactic difficulties are no longer an obstacle. I can finally focus on what really interests me: functions, logical structure, and user journeys.
As Jensen Huang, the CEO of NVIDIA also professes, the most important programming language today is natural human speech. I formulate the concept fluently in Hungarian or English, and the LLM translates it into Python. OpenAI's o1 model, and then the release of Gemini 3.1 brought the level where my instructions formulated with engineering precision result in immediately working code 99% of the time.
The Era of the "Senior Vibe Coder"
Since 2024, software development has become my passion. Today I work with several models, including Google Antigravity. I jokingly call myself a senior vibe coder, because although manual syntax writing is not my forte, understanding complex systems and creative design certainly is. With the help of artificial intelligence, I make as much progress with my hobby projects in a month today as a professional development team would have needed a whole year for in 2015.
Available Software and Beta Projects
I will soon be publishing several commercial software products,
but in the meantime, I would like to share some other free programs with you. These are beta versions that you can try out right now on Windows 11. These specific programs are free and will remain free. In the future, more complex, AI-integrated solutions will also be coming, which will be available on iOS and Linux platforms.
WR Media Extractor by Wraith Dreams V1.1
This purpose-built software serves to quickly and easily extract audio tracks (.wav) and subtitles (.srt) from existing .mkv containers.
• Platform: Windows 11
• License: Free to use and distribute (not for commercial use).