The unified JavaScript runtime standard is an idea whose time has come. Here’s an inside look at the movement for server-side JavaScript interoperability.
Nithin Kamath highlights how LLMs evolved from hallucinations to Linus Torvalds-approved code, democratizing tech and transforming software development.
Carey Business School experts Ritu Agarwal and Rick Smith share insights ahead of the latest installment of the Hopkins Forum, a conversation about AI and labor on Feb. 25 ...
People are getting excessive mental health advice from generative AI. This is unsolicited advice. Here's the backstory and what to do about it. An AI Insider scoop.
Google rolled out Gemini 3.1 Pro yesterday, touting a 77.1% score on novel logic puzzles that models can't just memorize—more than double 3 Pro's result—and record marks for expert-level scientific ...
According to GitHub, the PR was marked as a first-time contribution and closed by a Matplotlib maintainer within hours, as ...
The headlines are scary, reporting one round of mass layoffs after another from companies including Amazon, Microsoft, HP, General Motors, and UPS ...
AI isn’t killing tech jobs — it’s changing them, favoring pros who pair data and cloud savvy with curiosity, empathy and ...
After a two-year search for flaws in AI infrastructure, two Wiz researchers advise security pros to worry less about prompt ...
Location can make or break a digital experience. When a visitor lands on your site, you have a split second to greet them with the right language, currency, shipping offer, […] ...
Humanities students can now enter data science and AI without an engineering degree. Here’s a clear roadmap to start your tech journey ...
Earlier, Kamath highlighted a massive shift in the tech landscape: Large Language Models (LLMs) have evolved from “hallucinating" random text in 2023 to gaining the approval of Linus Torvalds in 2026.