John Blackman, a retired 6 -year -old electrical engineer, decided to help his community by simplifying the process of planning for church events. To do this, he used two unexpected tools, Claude and Replit.
In the technology world, when CEOs, founders, and researchers abandon technical discussions about the capabilities and indicators of artificial intelligence, they speak of the “democratization” of technology; That is, with the help of artificial intelligence, it is possible for everyone to program.
But when a 6 -year -old is enthusiastic about building an app to organize the Sunday’s events, this effort cannot be ignored. Even technology experts are fascinated by such a story and cannot appreciate the role of artificial intelligence in empowering millions of people.
Blackman was present at the Podcast of “How I AI” hosted by Claire Woo, the chief technology director of Launchdarkly, and spoke of its way to use Replit and Claud, owned by Anthropic to build an app that helps organizers of the church social events.
Web -style programming: Positive energy coding for real service to the community
The app developed by Blackman, developed at a cost of less than $ 5 and offers users with capabilities to organize and manage events to attract volunteers.
These events are part of the church’s “weekend”. Local gatherings where volunteers provide free social services, including hair shorts, vision screening, car washing, free meals, health clinic services and more.
The process of using artificial intelligence for app programming is called “Vibe Coding” by using natural language commands by former Openai researcher, Andrei Carpati.
Blackman considers the idea of building this app to be owned by his grandson, Brett, and appreciates his help. “I am in charge of registering these events, and I told myself it is good to be able to do it with the computer,” he said. “Brett said, well, the grandfather would come together.”
Blackman then described all what he wanted to be in the app, and the model also produced the user’s path and product requirements. After that, he entered the Replit environment to perform the app’s own coding. He also suggested the concept of “Impact Passport”; A QR Code printed document that lists the selected service of each event participant.
This is a guidance document for moving people between different stations, where volunteers mark the service, and the information is automatically recorded in the event system. This app allows church organizers to register participants, manage multiple events, and activate or disable services.
During the interview, Blackman described the path to building this fully practical app. The episode, which includes a dashboard and instant tracking capability of registrations and services, displays live notifications when logging in.
The app can also produce automatic reports of participants’ demographics, services, purchasing lists, vision clinic statistics, volunteer labeling list and more in PDF or Excel format.
Blackman’s efforts to build an app, not just testing a few attractive artificial intelligence tools, are unique. “They can’t believe that this app is really amazing,” he said of people’s reaction to the app. Blackman has not yet finished working on the app. He is still developing, fixing and receiving feedback on new features. However, he has no experience in programming.
He began his professional career in the year 9 as an operator of the mapping machine and became a system -building designer until year 4. A few years later, he received a personal pilot certification and worked on the design of wiring maps for the aerospace industry. In the late 1980s, he became interested in CAD computer design, worked with software such as AutoCAD and Microcad, and participated in several infrastructure projects before retirement in year 2.
One of his projects has been to upgrade power systems in St. Louis through “Power On” projects and how to connect Google Fiber cables to Kansas City Power & Light.
The story of Blackman is just one example that shows that other traditional barriers such as age, job path, education level or problem complexity are not impeding learning, participation or innovation.
Anyone can build
A similar story was reported in Japan last year, where a six -year -old man named Tomaji Suzuki began programming during his retirement. With the help of tools like ChatGpt, he improved his skills and began building apps for the nursing market. According to news reports, he designed eleven free iPhone apps to help his country’s elderly population.

On the other hand, there are a variety of stories that children have made using such platforms, apps and games. “My son went to an escape room,” one user of social network X wrote. When he returned, he said he wanted to buy that game. I said, “We can build it and start with the help of artificial intelligence and repplit and it was very fun.”
Anton Osica, CEO of Lovable, a popular programming platform with artificial intelligence support in X, wrote: “Children may be better than adults. “They have endless creativity and there is no fear in them.” He also added, “The future is clear!”
The report was first published on July 9 on the Analyticsindiamag website.
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