The pipeline discovered itself
Canva secretly exports websites, Gemini cleans the code, Stitch designs with source included. The free full-stack, assembled by accident.
// trace: where this idea came from
- ↳ video diary @ 10:16 (el hallazgo vía Reddit)
- ↳ video diary @ 16:11 (Stitch entrega el código fuente)
- ↳ Seed 5-1: La ventana gratis (la ventana gratis, ahora un pipeline completo)
Carlos spent the afternoon frustrated: translating Julia’s Canva designs into responsive web pages by hand is pixel-pushing tedium ▸ 7:04. By nightfall the problem didn’t exist anymore. Here’s the treasure map, because each step is free and none of them advertises the next.
The relay
A Reddit link buried in GPT’s search results revealed that Canva can publish designs as websites, and the result is decently responsive ▸ 10:16. Open Chrome’s inspector, copy the generated HTML, paste it into Gemini 2.5 Pro with “clean this up,” drop the output into a folder via Cline, and the page opens, images included, because Canva keeps hosting them on its own backend ▸ 13:13. Carlos came back from the bathroom already unemployed, as he put it.
Hours later Julia found Stitch, Google’s new AI design tool. It looks like it generates mockup images; click again and the HTML source is right there ▸ 16:11. So the stack assembled itself: Stitch does the front, Jules does the logic and backend. We named the combo on the spot: vibe UX plus vibe coding equals a free full-stack developer ▸ 18:53.
las piezas ya existían, faltaba el mapa →
The teaching
No single tool did this; the pipeline did, and no vendor documents the pipeline because each company only sees its own piece. The alpha is in the connections: found via Reddit threads, inspector windows, and asking “and what if I paste this THERE?” This is seed 5-1 grown into a whole toolchain: the free window isn’t one tool anymore, it’s an entire assembly line someone else is paying for. Ship while it lasts…
// continued in
no entry has continued this idea yet: the arc is still open