Relearning how to build
Rediscovering the joy of building through AI tools
I was inspired by Gustavs Cirulis' Build Like It's 1996, where he compared today's AI tools to the early days of 3D game making. No rule books, just curiosity and experimentation.
That took me back to my school library at 14, making fan sites on Angelfire, GeoCities, and Zoomshare, and customising Bebo and MySpace pages with HTML and CSS. Over time I picked up HTML and CSS properly through books, experimented with Microsoft FrontPage, and moved on to BEM, SASS, NPM, MVC frameworks, PHP, Ruby on Rails, and eventually React.
Then I drifted away. My day job pulled me deeper into design, and modern dev started to feel like a wall of errors, dependency issues, and red terminal text every time I tried coming back to build something. The spark faded.
I have been experimenting with Cursor for the past year. It feels like having a patient mentor on call, setting up projects, fixing issues, explaining why and how so I learn as I go. I have built a directory site for finding remote-friendly cafes and restaurants in Dubai, a padel tracking app, a music playlist name generator, and a handful of other small experiments.
But one in particular reminded me exactly why I love creating and bringing ideas to life: a Pokédex app built in SwiftUI using the PokeAPI, without writing a single line of SwiftUI myself. I set up an initial Xcode project, described what I wanted, and Cursor generated the entire app, explained how it worked, and even suggested small UI tweaks.
It was fast, fun, and effortless.
For me, the spark is back, and building feels playful again.

Tajdid Rahman
Taj is a product designer based in Dubai. He uses AI, design, and code to explore ideas and build digital experiences.
