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 ...
2025 has seen a significant shift in the use of AI in software engineering— a loose, vibes-based approach has given way to a systematic approach to managing how AI systems process context. Provided ...
In the rapidly evolving landscape of software development, one month can be enough to create a trend that makes big waves. In fact, only two months ago, Andrej Karpathy, a former head of AI at Tesla ...
Figma's new premium feature will enable people to describe an idea for an app or website, or pick an existing design, and have an AI model create working code for it. The launch follows the rise of ...
Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) has very quickly established a foothold among code developers as an essential tool in their workflow. Developers have shifted from the traditional code reuse ...
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 ...
A world that runs on increasingly powerful AI coding tools is one where software creation is cheap — or so the thinking goes — leaving little room for traditional software companies. As one analyst ...
The era of AI-generated "vibe coding" may be changing how software is built, but OpenAI's chair says the real revolution lies in autonomous AI agents reshaping the future of technology. On Wednesday, ...
With the recent release of GPT 5.2, OpenAI updated other related models, including its popular coding model Codex, bringing more agentic use cases to its fold. GPT-5.2-Codex, which OpenAI called in a ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. "Vibe coding" has software engineers wondering if AI could put them out of a job. But there are ways ...
Computer science and engineering students at the University of Washington, spooked about AI, returned from spring break last week to a surprising email from the department head. “I’m reaching out ...