The market's knee-jerk reaction makes enough superficial sense. Anthropic's AI-powered computer-coding platform Claude can easily help modernize complicated programs written in COBOL (Common ...
This is How I Got Here, a series where we chart the career journeys of technologists. Want to tell your story? Get in touch. When comedian Hasan Minhaj told a Baltimore crowd to learn to code to fund ...
International Business Machines stock is getting slammed Monday, becoming the latest perceived victim of rapidly developing AI technology, after Anthropic said its Claude Code tool could be used to ...
If you have ever interviewed for a job, there is a non-trivial probability that you have encountered “tricky” or quirky interview questions. These are questions that are intentionally unexpected, ...
Whether you're running a quick web search or creating a complex video, sharper prompts lead to stronger results. Level up your prompt game with the best tips and tricks I've learned. I’ve been writing ...
Companies like Crypto.com and IBM have signaled they're replacing jobs with AI. In February, CEO Jack Dorsey announced that Block was eliminating approximately 40% of staff. Klarna's workforce has ...
A new National Academies report recommends guidance for clinicians caring for individuals who were potentially exposed to drinking water contaminated by jet fuel accidently released on Oahu, Hawaii, ...
Tech workers are increasingly worried that the artificial intelligence they are building will replace them. But some are optimistic that it is just one more tool to work with. Though powerful, code ...
Anthropic is bringing Voice Mode to Claude Code, the company’s AI coding assistant for developers. The launch of voice mode marks a significant step toward more hands-free, conversational coding ...
The death of the entry-level role? Why 50% of white-collar jobs are at risk From 7,000 employees to fewer than 2,000 - the world's biggest companies aren't waiting for AI to arrive, they're already ...
Team Mirai, a political party founded by software engineers, won 11 seats in Japan's legislature by promising chatbots, self-driving buses and high-tech jobs.