"Vibe coding" has software engineers wondering if AI could put them out of a job. But there are ways to survive in an era when AI is so smart it can translate "vibes" into fully fledged lines of code.
Vibe coding allows manufacturing personnel to create software using everyday speech instead of traditional programming, enabling production managers to simply say "build a monitoring dashboard for ...
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 ...
Rupesh Dabbir is a Software Engineering Manager at Google with over a decade of experience building highly scalable systems in the cloud. The emergence of artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming ...
I recently asked whether AI is the end of IT as we know it. After seeing vibe coding in action, I had the same question: Could vibe coding be the end of software development as we know it? I asked a ...
The new trend of "vibe coding" allows people to program software without writing a single line of code. Now, a new study by ...
Now, it's an open question: Is there still a value in learning how to code?
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 ...
Developers are shifting from writing every line to guiding A.I., and facing fresh challenges in review and oversight. Unsplash+ An emerging trend known as “vibe coding” is changing the way software ...
CNBC put the AI threat to software companies to the test by vibe-coding a version of the tools from Monday.com. Silicon Valley insiders say the most exposed software names are the ones that "sit on ...
The no-code movement is revolutionizing software development by allowing non-technical users to create applications without coding. Traditionally, software required extensive programming skills and ...
I was entering the miseries of seventh grade in the fall of 1980 when a friend dragged me into a dimly lit second-floor room. The school had recently installed a newfangled Commodore PET computer, a ...