Bugs show up, eat all your time, and gaslight you into thinking you are the problem. You’re not. You just solved that problem a few commits ago, but now it’s harvest season again. Half the bugs you ...
I noticed that the "Debug Visualizer" extension is currently available only in the VS Code Marketplace, but not in the Cursor Marketplace. Since many of us are using the Cursor editor, it would be ...
The left side of the Minecraft F3 debug screen shows you the game's version, coordinates, and biome, among other data. The right side of the F3 debug screen displays info about the Java version, your ...
Hidden away in your Android phone's developer settings is a powerful feature called USB debugging. It's a special mode that opens a direct line of communication between your smartphone and a computer, ...
There are few areas where AI has seen more robust deployment than the field of software development. From “vibe” coding to GitHub Copilot to startups building quick-and-dirty applications with support ...
AI models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and other top AI labs are increasingly being used to assist with programming tasks. Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in October that 25% of new code at the company is ...
The ongoing proliferation of AI coding tools is not only boosting developers’ efficiency, it also signals a future where AI will generate a growing share of all new code. GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke ...
Telestration has long been the tool of choice for football analysts to explain actions on the field, but sometimes overhead annotation can’t match in-studio visualization. For the past three weeks, ...
Perplexity might not be the first choice as a coding assistant, given the numerous competitors like Cursor, Bolt, V0, and ChatGPT. However, Perplexity, an advanced AI-powered search engine, is ...
Telestration has long been the tool of choice for football analysts to explain actions on the field, but sometimes overhead annotation can’t match in studio visualization. For the past three weeks, ...
Every once in a while a seemingly pointless computing question of mine becomes an obsession. This week, that question is, "Whatever happened to music visualizers? And can I still use one?" In the ...