I Tried Hostinger’s New Horizons AI Developer Tool: My Review

I Tried Hostinger’s New Horizons AI Developer Tool: My Review

What went right ๐Ÿ˜

Right off the bat, from the very first iteration that Horizons created, the aesthetics were on point.

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Although I didnโ€™t include anything about colors, fonts, or how I wanted the app to look in my initial prompt, the result I got back was very modern and attractive. It seemed to lean in the style of what the Hostinger website might look like in a dark theme:

Original iteration of the time keeping app

Beyond that, I was able to fix some initial bugs with prompts and I got the app to a point where it seemed to work. The buttons did what they were supposed to โ€“ at least it seemed like it at first glance. I could fill out all the fields, make my choices, export my made-up invoices as PDFs, etc.

However, upon doing some more comprehensive testing, it turned out that some of the features didnโ€™t actually work the way they were supposed to. The first glances were misleading.

What went wrong โ˜น๏ธ

The biggest bug that I discovered was that the core feature of my app didnโ€™t work. That is to say, it didnโ€™t track time properly.

I was able to start the timer and watch it tick away, second by second. I was also able to use the pause and stop buttons. However, if I went to another tab and left it on โ€“ which youโ€™d do in a real-life scenario โ€“ the actual time that passed when I went back to it was way more than what the timer showed.

For instance, I left it on for about an hour, but when I checked on it, it showed that only nine minutes had passed.

There were also some other bugs with certain data not being pulled into the dashboard.

In defense of Horizons, I did not attempt to fix these bugs with further prompts because I wanted to move on with the other experiment.

I also felt like for the amount of time I put into it (about three hours in total) and what I got in return was incredibly impressive. Perhaps not deployable just yet, but definitely mind-blowing. Especially when you consider that five years ago, it would have taken a professional developer a few weeks (if not longer) to get the same prototype.

And if I was a developer working on this as a serious project, I could export the code and manually fix the bugs myself.

2. One page website with interactive scroll effects

For the website experiment, I decided to rebuild my own portfolio site. I wanted to add some interactive scroll features to it that I saw on another one page website.

I initially attempted to paste the entire source code of the inspiration site into Horizons. However, I ended up going over the character limit by ~63,000 characters! ๐Ÿ™ˆ To work around this limitation, I took screenshots of the source code instead. I then fed those to Horizons in a few batches:

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