A quick hands-on proof of concept shows how Visual Studio's new custom-agent framework can be aimed at a real Blazor project, along with what else is new in the March update.
OpenClaw's Node for VS Code extension proved it can support a real local file-based workflow, but on Windows the experience still feels more like early infrastructure than finished tooling.
Infosecurity outlines key recommendations for CISOs and security teams to implement safeguards for AI-assisted coding ...
Discover why kids should learn to code with updated statistics on job demand, salaries, cognitive benefits, and the best ...
This is GlassWorm: a software supply chain attack that security researchers are calling one of the most sophisticated and ...
Preview of new companion app allows developers to run multiple agent sessions in parallel across multiple repos and iterate ...
The Java ecosystem has historically been blessed with great IDEs to work with, including NetBeans, Eclipse and IntelliJ from JetBrains. However, in recent years Microsoft's Visual Studio Code editor ...
Valued at $1.6 billion, a tiny start-up called Axiom is building A.I. systems that can check for mistakes. Valued at $1.6 billion, a tiny start-up called Axiom is building A.I. systems that can check ...
A malware campaign uses WhatsApp messages to deliver VBS scripts that initiate a multi-stage infection chain. The attack ...
Even if you haven't written a line of code before, I would simply not believe you if you tell me you haven’t heard of Claude Code. I'd go as far as saying it's today’s version of what ChatGPT was when ...