Episode 63 - Travis Dockter episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 24, 2026 · 57 MIN

Episode 63 - Travis Dockter

from Code and the Coding Coders who Code it · host Drew Bragg

What if the most useful software in your life isn’t a product, but something you built for yourself in an evening? That’s the spark for this conversation with Travis Dockter, a Rails developer and organizer of Blast Off Rails, where we dig into how AI turns personal ideas into working tools—fast. From a “house health” app that scores chores to a suite of single-user utilities, we break down what’s changed: ideation is quicker, boilerplate is lighter, and the cost of experimentation has never been lower.We get real about security for personal apps and why network-level access with Tailscale can be the right fit when you’re the only user. It’s a conversation about risk, not dogma—matching controls to stakes and keeping momentum. We also examine the blurry space around AI-assisted pen testing, the difference between “won’t” and “can’t” in model behavior, and how to navigate that responsibly. Then we push forward: what happens when an agent can manage a Markdown knowledge base or a SQLite file directly? If the UI becomes conversation, design becomes orchestration and feedback, not screens.Docs turn out to be the sleeper blocker. Travis details a pragmatic Obsidian workflow: agents.md files scoped to code areas, linked session notes, and templates that help models find the right context when it counts. We round it out with hard-won lessons on token efficiency, choosing the right model for planning vs building, and experimenting with multi-model “counselors” to balance cost and quality. Finally, we share why a Rails-focused, single-track conference in Albuquerque can actually boost your day-to-day work: tighter content, lower travel costs, and rooms full of people solving the same problems.If you’ve been itching to ship something small and useful, this is your nudge. Subscribe for more builder-first conversations, share this episode with a friend who loves Rails, and leave a quick review so others can find the show.Send us some love. HoneybadgerHoneybadger delivers best-in-class error tracking, intelligent logging, and Just Enough APM™. JudoscaleAutoscaling that actually works. Take control of your cloud hosting.Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show

What if the most useful software in your life isn’t a product, but something you built for yourself in an evening? That’s the spark for this conversation with Travis Dockter, a Rails developer and organizer of Blast Off Rails, where we dig into how AI turns personal ideas into working tools—fast. From a “house health” app that scores chores to a suite of single-user utilities, we break down what’s changed: ideation is quicker, boilerplate is lighter, and the cost of experimentation has never ...

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Episode 63 - Travis Dockter

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This episode is 57 minutes long.

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This episode was published on March 24, 2026.

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What if the most useful software in your life isn’t a product, but something you built for yourself in an evening? That’s the spark for this conversation with Travis Dockter, a Rails developer and organizer of Blast Off Rails, where we dig into how...

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