The following article originally appeared on Addy Osmani’s blog and is being reposted here with the author’s permission. The default behavior of any AI coding agent is to take the shortest path to “done.” Ask for a feature and it writes the feature. It doesn’t ask whether you have a spec, write a test before […]
AI's rapid CRM development could revolutionize enterprise software, reducing costs and time, but requires broader validation for credibility.
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Grok Build's screenshot feature streamlines debugging, potentially enhancing developer productivity and influencing AI-driven coding tools' evolution.
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Grok Build's screenshot feature streamlines debugging, potentially enhancing developer productivity and influencing AI-driven coding tools' evolution.
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xAI's Grok Build challenges competitors to enhance AI coding tools, emphasizing exclusivity and innovation in professional workflows.
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xAI's Grok CLI for PowerShell could reshape enterprise coding workflows, enhancing efficiency and collaboration in software development.
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SpaceX’s IPO filing has exposed a striking contradiction at the heart of Elon Musk’s empire: the same entrepreneur who built Tesla on a mission to eliminate hydrocarbon dependency is now spending $2.8 billion on natural gas turbines to power xAI’s data centres, while the NAACP pursues legal action over dozens of unpermitted generators already operating […]
The backlash was inevitable. For the past year, Silicon Valley has been telling us that software development is on the verge of becoming a prompt-and-ship exercise. You know, just describe what you want and let an AI coding agent build it. Sure, maybe you could keep a few token senior engineers around to bless the output…or maybe not. I mean, Google’s Sundar Pichai says 75% of its new code is now AI-generated and reviewed by engineers, up sharply from earlier levels.
Hurray! Right??? Well…
The Wall Street Journal recently highlighted warnings from Mario Zechner and Armin Ronacher, two engineers behind core pieces of the popular OpenClaw AI agent, who argue that AI coding tools are flooding software with what they call “vibe slop.” Their complaint is that too many people are using AI to skip the parts of software development that actually matter: design, judgment, testing, ownership, and deep understanding of the system being changed.
This is worth taking seriously. When people who help