Google and Replit are expanding their partnership to bring vibe coding to more companies. Replit projects $1 billion in revenue by the end of 2026, its CEO told Business Insider. Sundar Pichai says ...
A critical remote code execution vulnerability in React.js has been identified. React.js is a JavaScript library for building fast, interactive user interfaces (UIs) using reusable components. The ...
Facepalm: A widely used web technology is affected by a serious security vulnerability that can be exploited with minimal effort to compromise servers. Known as "React2Shell," the flaw may require ...
A maximum severity vulnerability, dubbed 'React2Shell', in the React Server Components (RSC) 'Flight' protocol allows remote code execution without authentication in React and Next.js applications.
Critical vulnerability in React library should be treated by IT as they did Log4j - as an emergency, warns one expert. Developers using the React 19 library for building application interfaces are ...
Vibe-coding sounds like something born from a Discord meme, not a serious shift in how we build software. Yet the idea keeps gaining attention. People want faster ways to write code, even if the code ...
“Vibe coding,” a form of software development that involves turning natural language into computer code by using artificial intelligence (AI), has been named Collins Dictionary’s Word of the Year for ...
During the first half of Thursday night’s Vikings-Chargers game, Prime Video’s Al Michaels said the Minnesota kicker Will Reichard’s only missed field goal of the season happened when the ball struck ...
Google is expanding access to Opal, its AI vibe-coding app, to 15 more countries. The app, which lets you create mini web apps using text prompts, is now available in Canada, India, Japan, South Korea ...
The overwhelming majority of tech industry workers use artificial intelligence on the job for tasks like writing and modifying code, a new Google study has found. The report, coming from Google’s DORA ...
For years, tech leaders and politicians told students that learning to code was a ticket to six-figure jobs. That promise is faltering for today’s computer science graduates, many of whom are now ...