The strategy—sometimes called “vibe coding” —mirrors how some of the biggest players in Silicon Valley write code these days.
OpenAI’s Codex Chrome extension pushes the coding agent into signed-in browser work, making it more useful for real tasks while raising new questions about access, approvals, and agentic AI risk.
Companies like Lovable, Base44, Replit, and Netlify use AI to let anyone build a web app in seconds—and in thousands of cases ...
Google has shut down Project Mariner, the AI browser agent that navigated websites by processing screenshots in real time.
Google’s A.I. search technology is far from perfect (don’t count on it for celebrity news), but it excels at tasks like ...
Microsoft’s Azure-based AI development and deployment platform shines with a strong selection of models and agent types and ...
Four npm packages linked to SAP's Cloud Application Programming Model were hijacked. The hackers added code that steals ...
Recently, The White House launched its own official app on iOS and Android, claiming that it gives users "unparalleled access ...
St. Mary's Episcopal School has named Dr. Caroline Flynn as head of school, replacing Albert Throckmorton, who is retiring at ...
New desktop app adds AI Mode, letting users search files and web without a browser Add as a preferred source on Google Gemini-powered app adds smart search, file access and screen-based queries. Dubai ...
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
Most people access Google’s search and AI products through a browser, but you’ve got some new options today. Google has been testing a Windows search app for some months, and it’s now officially ...