I'm not a programmer, but I tried four vibe coding tools to see if I could build anything at all on my own. Here's what I did and did not accomplish.
I tried four vibe-coding tools, including Cursor and Replit, with no coding background. Here's what worked (and what didn't).
ZDNET's key takeaways VailuxOS is a Linux distribution that looks like Windows.With a Debian base and KDE Plasma GUI, this ...
There are all sorts of running goals—conquer a marathon, get out three times a week—but one of the most significant performance-based goals is to Get Faster! Let’s face it: Most of us, unless we’re ...
Jason Chun is a CNET writer covering a range of topics in tech, home, wellness, finance and streaming services. He is passionate about language and technology, and has been an avid writer/reader of ...
Bolt Graphics is pressing ahead with its plan to challenge Nvidia and AMD by building a graphics processor around a RISC-V ...
AI data trainer roles have moved from obscure contractor gigs to a visible career path with clear pay bands and defined skills. Companies building chatbots, recommendation engines, and large language ...
In this article author Sachin Joglekar discusses the transformation of CLI terminals becoming agentic where developers can state goals while the AI agents plan, call tools, iterate, ask for approval ...
Rust-based inference engines and local runtimes have appeared with the shared goal: running models faster, safer and closer ...
Linux offers control, security, and freedom, but its learning curve, software, and hardware issues may challenge some users.
I really have too many tray icons. You know the ones. They sit on your taskbar, perhaps doing something in the background or, ...
The world tried to kill Andy off but he had to stay alive to to talk about what happened with databases in 2025.