Samsung's 'Vibe Coding' Revolution: Customizing Smartphone Experiences with AI for Everyone

March 7, 2026
Samsung's 'Vibe Coding' Revolution: Customizing Smartphone Experiences with AI for Everyone
  • This idea follows Samsung’s AI-driven moves, including Now Nudge-to-Perplexity integration and the branding of flagship devices as AI phones.

  • Samsung is exploring vibe coding, a concept that would let users customize or create small, personalized features for smartphone apps, expanding beyond premade tools.

  • Vibe coding sits within a broader trend of AI-assisted app creation, with tools like OpenAI Codex and Anthropic Claude Agent simplifying app-building for both developers and non-developers.

  • Samsung frames vibe coding as a potential step toward greater user control over device experiences, building on AI-driven enhancements and the company’s AI phone branding.

  • Publication date for the report is March 7, 2026.

  • Widespread adoption depends on making AI tools easy for ordinary smartphone users, who are largely unaware of these capabilities.

  • The discussion follows Samsung's Galaxy S26 Unpacked event, which highlighted AI-powered software updates and notable hardware improvements, including a 39% boost in NPU processing.

  • A broader future is envisioned where devices can be designed and adjusted by users to fit individual needs, though this will require user-friendly design and practicality from manufacturers.

  • AI-assisted platforms like Nothing’s Playground already enable basic widget creation and simple prompts to customize apps, though building full-scale apps remains out of reach.

  • While familiarity with these platforms is limited today, they hint at a future where non-developers can build or customize apps without coding.

  • The vibe-coding feature is not yet tested on Samsung’s One UI, but it represents ongoing efforts to give users greater control over their phone experience.

  • The concept relies on natural-language-to-code processes, allowing non-technical users to describe project goals in everyday language to tools like Windsurf, Codex, or Cursor.

Summary based on 5 sources


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