Samsung is exploring AI-powered “vibe coding” for Galaxy phones, a concept that could let users create custom apps or features with simple prompts.
Around one month after launching Codex for Mac, OpenAI brings Codex to Windows with a new suite of IDEs supported.
Samsung is investigating vibe coding for app customization, while AI tools are simplifying app creation for non-coders.
Ready to start your vibe-coding adventure? A few weeks after its debut on Mac, the Windows version of OpenAI’s Codex app has finally arrived.
AI helped you code your dream app, and here’s what to do with it.
Vibe coding turns software development into a conversation. You focus on the idea, and the AI model handles most of the implementation. Barbara is a tech writer specializing in AI and emerging ...
What if coding wasn’t just about functionality but also about creating an experience, an app that feels as intuitive as it is powerful? With its latest overhaul of AI Studio, Google is betting big on ...
Vibe coding works best in tiny steps, not big specs. Persistent AI documentation eliminates re-ramp time. Git, backups, and exports are critical safety nets. This is not my first vibe coding rodeo. I ...
Mustafa Suleyman says vibe coding is rapidly lowering the barrier to building apps, a shift that could put traditional software at risk. The Microsoft AI CEO said in an episode of the "Exponential ...
OpenAI launches Codex for Windows, letting developers run multiple AI coding agents, automate testing tasks, and sync projects seamlessly across Mac and Windows.