One of the hottest markets in the artificial intelligence industry is selling chatbots that write computer code. Some call it “vibe-coding” because it encourages an AI coding assistant to do the grunt ...
We’re seeing a wave of new generative AI tools that can write text, generate images, create music and more. Some can even write computer code, which makes sense when you think that computer code is ...
Distillery reports that in 2025, generative AI is significantly boosting software developer productivity, enhancing ...
TL;DR: Vibe coding, a term coined by Andrej Karpathy, involves using AI to generate code based on intuitive prompts without understanding the intricacies. It democratizes programming, enabling rapid ...
As artificial intelligence continues to reshape industries, one of the most significant innovations in the software world is the rise of coding agents. They are reshaping how code is written, tested ...
On a 5K screen in Kirkland, Washington, four terminals blur with activity as artificial intelligence generates thousands of lines of code. Steve Yegge, a veteran software engineer who previously ...
Software engineering is among the many fields being changed with the fast progress in large language models (LLMs). In a few years, LLMs have evolved from advanced code autocomplete tools to AI agents ...
AI isn’t going to replace you. But a developer who knows how to leverage AI in the development process just might. If you aren’t aware of the tectonic shift that is generative artificial intelligence, ...
A.I. tools from Microsoft and other companies are helping write code, placing software engineers at the forefront of the technology’s potential to disrupt the work force. By Steve Lohr Steve Lohr has ...
Senior software developers are preparing for a major shift in how they work as artificial intelligence becomes central to their workflows, according to BairesDev’s latest Dev Barometer report ...
“Am I getting dumber?” That’s the line that made me spit my coffee. Just a little bit, not like a classic sitcom take. The question was uttered by one of my CTO friends who still develops software at ...