Happy #NationalInternDay! This summer, we were lucky to host 5 amazing interns across Design, AI, and our Platform teams: Shivani Toshniwal, Emily Xiao, Gabriel Orlanski, Palaash Kolhe, and Jonathan Zhou. We are grateful for all of your contributions this summer to support our mission to empower the next billion software creators. If you are interested in joining Replit as a future intern, applications for Summer 2025 interns will kick off later this fall! https://replit.com/careers.
Replit
Software Development
San Francisco, California 26,707 followers
Build software collaboratively from anywhere in the world, on any device, without spending a second on setup.
About us
Build software collaboratively from anywhere in the world, on any device, without spending a second on setup
- Website
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https://replit.com
External link for Replit
- Industry
- Software Development
- Company size
- 51-200 employees
- Headquarters
- San Francisco, California
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2016
Locations
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Primary
767 Bryant St
Unit 210
San Francisco, California 94107, US
Employees at Replit
Updates
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Replit reposted this
Llama 3.1 is an: - open source model... - that responds instantly (8b)... - and can be accessed for free via API with @GroqInc How will this change LLM development?
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🦙 Some are looking for love, we're just looking for Llama. ⚡ Lightning-fast Meta Llama 3.1 is best served on Replit. Check it out today, courtesy of Groq Demo from Matt Palmer 💪
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New around here? Just looking around? Learn about Replit in 60 seconds with Matt Palmer
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Replit reposted this
We just saw a massive acceleration in Replit's mission. We've always talked about how anyone can code, but the data never really reflected that... until now. When companies started adopting Repit, we found that 50% of users are NOT “engineers.” So what are they doing with it? We saw: - Marketing teams build competitive analysis tools - Finance writes complex data analysis scripts - Designers bring prototypes to life - Sales engineers rapidly solving customer problems - Product Managers shipping *production* software! I can't think of a single knowledge work department that is not represented in the data. So how did this happen? Since ChatGPT came out, many technical people have brushed up on their coding skills. With Replit Teams, they have found that they can ditch a hodgepodge of tools in favor of good ol' software code that AI is so good at generating. "I have tried every no-code tool and AI app. I have been coding for nearly 15 years now. Nothing has sparked the creative code output that Replit has for me. I have coded more in the past 12 months than the previous 10 years because it makes it so easy to get started and just try stuff. We can just focus on building ideas.” - Max Miner, Executive Director of Product and Design Product and Design teams at companies like SkillsEngine are transforming from traditional no-code departments into prolific teams that can write and ship code. This is saving them thousands of dollars in both software and contractor hours. It's also that much more fun and gratifying to build things yourself. Read more about SkillsEngine + Replit: https://lnkd.in/eUMaTtru We're finally fully in the era of democratized coding, one that we've been dreaming about for years, a huge milestone towards our mission of empowering a million software creators. Replit Teams Launch: https://lnkd.in/eZfp6ksJ
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Replit reposted this
Want to learn how to use AI to be a better student? Yesterday, I built and deployed a React app with ZERO javascript knowledge. Here's my tumultuous story of building with AI: I've heard lots about AI-native coding from Amjad so I headed to Anthropic to try Artifacts— I've always wanted to learn frontend eng and I was playing around with WiFi QR codes, so I decided to build a generator to deploy on Replit: "Create a React app that generates a QR Code from a Wi-Fi username, password, and authentication type" I didn't expect this to work in one-shot (it didn't), but I had high hopes for Artifacts. So it seemed like things were broken because qrcode.react wasn't available on Claude. To be fair, Claude also provided a list of things to make this app work, so I headed to Replit to see if I could patch together something that worked. Here's where building with AI gets fun— if you don't understand basic concepts, you'll have a bad time. Things I didn't know: 1. How React related to JavaScript 2. How Next.js related to React 3. How shadcdn/ui related to TailwindCSS 4. How all of these tied together SO I tried (and failed) to setup projects with a smattering of components, folders, and failed installations. I quickly realized all of my errors were coming from weird component issues. The code from Claude was good, but it assumed I knew what I was doing (I didn't). This is why so many hackers opt for Python. `python main (dot) py` or a notebook is much simpler. BUT the secret to building with AI is: 1. Understand frameworks 2. Know what you don't know 3. Make instructions simple What did I learn? 1. JavaScript is a language, TypeScript is a stricter version 2. React is a LIBRARY for JavaScript 3. Next.js is a FRAMEWORK for React 4. TailwindCSS is a FRAMEWORK for CSS 5. shadcn/ui is a COLLECTION OF COMPONENTS built with React and TailwindCSS Logically: 1. I don't need TypeScript 2. I don't need Next.js 3. I should use something that makes React apps easy (I found Vite). Once I did that, I had something that ran! It wasn't polished, but now that I understood things I could spin up a Repl and start iterating— enough to establish a development environment. A few hours later I had a responsive, functional web app. Was it perfect? No. Was it production-ready? No. But with a few iterations it got better. More importantly, I was able to improve it as I LEARNED React concepts. Now, I could build the same app in 15 mins. I see many claim they don't want to use AI—they'd like to learn the fundamentals. But you CAN learn the fundamentals with AI. Learning and problem solving are pattern mapping exercises. Those patterns are just more accessible the same way Stack Overflow was more accessible than text. A bonus is that you get more done. In the time it took me to build this app, I'd still be working through a intro chapter in a "What is JavaScript" course (Continued in comments)
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Replit reposted this
It’s not everyday that one of your favorite software companies (Replit) takes notice of your work and wants to share it with the world as part of their latest feature launch. This week Replit, the coding tool I use daily, launched their newest Teams feature to the public (https://replit.com/teams). Our SkillsEngine Product Design team was lucky enough to be invited to join in the early beta of Replit Teams, and we’re loving it. With Replit we’ve built production apps, prototypes, workflow automations, and data processing systems that never would have otherwise been possible without sacrificing valuable engineering time and roadmap. In short, we're building more, faster than ever before. And Replit plays a big role in that transformation. Thank you to the Replit team, Haya Odeh , Amjad Masad, Jeff Burke, and everyone else involved for telling our story and helping make our work possible. You can read more about how our SkillsEngine design team is putting Replit to work to accelerate product innovation in their latest blog post: https://lnkd.in/geWbqysV
We just saw a massive acceleration in Replit's mission. We've always talked about how anyone can code, but the data never really reflected that... until now. When companies started adopting Repit, we found that 50% of users are NOT “engineers.” So what are they doing with it? We saw: - Marketing teams build competitive analysis tools - Finance writes complex data analysis scripts - Designers bring prototypes to life - Sales engineers rapidly solving customer problems - Product Managers shipping *production* software! I can't think of a single knowledge work department that is not represented in the data. So how did this happen? Since ChatGPT came out, many technical people have brushed up on their coding skills. With Replit Teams, they have found that they can ditch a hodgepodge of tools in favor of good ol' software code that AI is so good at generating. "I have tried every no-code tool and AI app. I have been coding for nearly 15 years now. Nothing has sparked the creative code output that Replit has for me. I have coded more in the past 12 months than the previous 10 years because it makes it so easy to get started and just try stuff. We can just focus on building ideas.” - Max Miner, Executive Director of Product and Design Product and Design teams at companies like SkillsEngine are transforming from traditional no-code departments into prolific teams that can write and ship code. This is saving them thousands of dollars in both software and contractor hours. It's also that much more fun and gratifying to build things yourself. Read more about SkillsEngine + Replit: https://lnkd.in/eUMaTtru We're finally fully in the era of democratized coding, one that we've been dreaming about for years, a huge milestone towards our mission of empowering a million software creators. Replit Teams Launch: https://lnkd.in/eZfp6ksJ
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It’s time to bring software collaboration into the 21st century. Replit is ready for the workplace. Replit Teams is now available to all: - Real-time: stay on top of what work is happening and pair program - Version control: don’t know git? No problem — fork and merge easily - AI: Replit AI chat, code generation, and full repo intelligence (RAG) - Admin tools: Access control, central billing, and more Get started today at replit.com/teams
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Replit reposted this
So many SaaS tools you can build for yourself in <1hr with AI + no code. I made this meeting brief bot with Replit + Zapier that - Researches attendee companies - Summarizes CRM notes - Pulls LinkedIn data 30 min before a meeting, it Slacks me my meeting brief in Notion. I host the bulk of the logic (e.g. crewAI, formatting, etc) on Replit. Zaps are temp placeholders when I want to avoid coding boilerplate (e.g. auth). Replit Deployments + Zapier webhooks 🤝 perfect for these personal Frankenstein apps.