Coding is no longer just about writing. It’s about orchestrating. Why Vibe Coding, And Why Now? In early 2025, AI researcher Andrej Karpathy introduced the term vibe coding to describe something many ...
AI-generated code accounted for more than half of shipped code among nearly one-third of senior developers who participated in a recent survey by cloud platform provider Fastly. The company’s July ...
Google Gemini has a problem with self-criticism. “I am sorry for the trouble. I have failed you. I am a failure,” the AI tool recently told someone who was using Gemini to build a compiler, according ...
Facepalm: Vibe coding sounds like a great idea, at least in theory. You talk to a chatbot in plain English, and the underlying AI model builds a fully functional app for you. But as it turns out, vibe ...
OpenAI’s ChatGPT writes computer code. Correspondent Welcome back to In the Loop, TIME’s new twice-weekly newsletter about the world of AI. We're publishing installments both as stories on Time.com ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Davey Winder is a veteran cybersecurity writer, hacker and analyst. Vibe coding isn’t what a lot of people seem to think it is.
At a Computer Science Education Seminar talk Thursday, C++ creator Bjarne Stroustrup shared his thoughts on the role of C++ and what needs fixing in programming education. C++, a programming language ...
Microsoft's latest Visual Studio preview facilitates "vibe coding," where developers mainly use GitHub Copilot AI to do all the programming in accordance with spoken or typed instructions. The term ...
Big quote: The recently coined buzzword "vibe coding" is transforming the startup landscape, allowing companies to hit remarkable revenue targets with teams so small they're rewriting the rules of ...
We talk about Morse code, named after its inventor, Samuel Morse. However, maybe we should call it Vail code after Alfred Vail, who may be its real inventor. Haven’t heard of him? You aren’t alone.
Earlier this year, Microsoft killed WordPad—the free and surprisingly capable built-in word processor that debuted in Windows 95. For this, they must be punished. Yet while Microsoft taketh away, they ...