AI-driven coding could revolutionize software development, drastically reducing costs and timelines, but raises concerns about code quality and security.
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Key Takeaways June’s existing home sales dropped 2.4% to an annual pace of 4.09 million units, creating challenges for Opendoor’s business model Mortgage rates for 30-year loans increased to 6.49%, while median home prices reached an all-time high of $440,600 The company’s inventory-based approach leaves it vulnerable to market slowdowns and elevated carrying costs Analyst consensus points to a 12-month target of $4.38, with projections spanning from $1.40 to $8.00 across 7 analysts Projections suggest mortgage rates will remain north of 6% until 2028, delaying any meaningful sector rebound Opendoor Technologies (OPEN) stands out as one of the market’s most interest rate-dependent stocks. The company’s business revolves around purchasing residential properties, maintaining inventory, and selling them for profit — an approach heavily reliant on hous
SpaceXAI has launched Grok 4.5, pitching the model to developers and enterprises trying to control the rising cost of AI-assisted software development.
In a statement, the company said the model is priced at $2 per million input tokens and $6 per million output tokens. It said the model is built for coding and agentic work, runs at 80 tokens per second, and uses fewer tokens than comparable models on some software engineering tasks.
Grok 4.5 is available through the SpaceXAI console and Grok Build. It is also available in Cursor, the AI coding tool made by Anysphere, giving SpaceXAI a route into a development environment already used by programmers rather than only competing through an API. SpaceXAI said EU availability is expected in mid-July.
In June, SpaceX, which owns SpaceXAI, said it was buying Anysphere, the startup behind Cursor, in a deal aimed at strengthening its position in enterprise AI tools. In a separate statement, Cursor said that Grok 4.5 was trained jointly with Spac
SpaceXAI has launched Grok 4.5, pitching the model to developers and enterprises trying to control the rising cost of AI-assisted software development.
In a statement, the company said the model is priced at $2 per million input tokens and $6 per million output tokens. It said the model is built for coding and agentic work, runs at 80 tokens per second, and uses fewer tokens than comparable models on some software engineering tasks.
Grok 4.5 is available through the SpaceXAI console and Grok Build. It is also available in Cursor, the AI coding tool made by Anysphere, giving SpaceXAI a route into a development environment already used by programmers rather than only competing through an API. SpaceXAI said EU availability is expected in mid-July.
In June, SpaceX, which owns SpaceXAI, said it was buying Anysphere, the startup behind Cursor, in a deal aimed at strengthening its position in enterprise AI tools. In a separate statement, Cursor said that Grok 4.5 was trained jointly with Spac
Los Angeles-based startup EdVisorly tells Crunchbase News exclusively that it has secured a $13.3 million Series A funding round to scale its AI-native platform, which automates the manual back-office workflows that can slow down university admissions.
To get an expanded sense of how busy startup backers spent Q2, we put together several rankings for active investors. These include active venture backers, lead investors, highest spenders and prolific seed dealmakers.
For the last 40 years or so, software development tooling has centered around the IDE — the integrated development environment. Borland is widely credited with bringing the IDE to the masses. The joining of the editor, compiler, and debugger into a single entity revolutionized the software development industry. The popularization of the IDE through the likes of my beloved Turbo Pascal in the mid-1980s marked a huge turning point for coding.
But the IDE’s reign is over. With the unbelievably rapid rise of agentic coding, the IDE has become an afterthought, a tool that developers are finding they use less and less. Instead, developers are spending time managing agents that are actually writing the code.
Things are moving pretty fast, changing monthly if not weekly. It was only a few months ago that I was building things inside my IDE with an agent’s help. But before long, I had four or five console windows open, working on different projects all at the same time as the agents ground aw