Daniel Ansorregui has developed LightInk, an open-source solar-powered E-ink watch inspired by 90s solar digital watches. It ...
If you were to point to a single device responsible for much of Hackaday’s early success, it might be the Arduino Uno. The ...
Autonomous agents are compressing software delivery timelines from weeks to days. The enterprises that scale agents safely will be the ones that build using spec-driven development. There’s a moment ...
Anyone can code using AI. But it might come with a hidden cost. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. Over the past year, AI systems have ...
Companies are scrambling to deal with the glut. Credit...Mojo Wang Supported by By Mike Isaac and Erin Griffith Reporting from San Francisco When a financial services company recently began using ...
Steve Jobs founded Apple 50 years ago this week on a simple idea: democratize computing by putting personal computers in the hands of anyone. Now, Apple is going against that founding mission by ...
As AI coding tools generate billions of lines of code each month, a new bottleneck is emerging: ensuring that software works as intended. Qodo, a startup building AI agents for code review, testing, ...
AI coding tools are improving, but not always in ways that make software more secure. In this Dark Reading News Desk interview, Brian Fox explains that while LLMs have reduced hallucinations, they are ...
A journalist with no coding experience at all has created his own tax filing app, but is looking for experts to stress-test it since all the code was written by artificial intelligence. Processing ...
For decades, building software required significant cost. You needed people and process. You needed tools, infrastructure, sprint cycles, coordination plus capital, structure, and distribution plans.
Despite the AI-driven software stock meltdown, America’s largest corporations aren’t ditching their core business software just yet. Instead, they’re using the moment to squeeze better deals from ...
The 8051 was an 8-bit Harvard-architecture microcontroller first put out by Intel in 1980. They’ve since discontinued that line, but it lives on in the low-cost STC8 family of chips, which is ...