KPMG US recently ran a pilot in which tax professionals developed software using vibe coding. By the end of the six-week program, tax workers had developed software that the company said it now uses.
Anyone can code using AI. But it might come with a hidden cost. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. Over the past year, AI systems have ...
Veronica Beagle is the managing editor for Education at Forbes Advisor. She completed her master’s in English at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. Before coming to Forbes Advisor she worked on ...
Selloff spills beyond US, drags down European names Wall Street rethinks one of its favorite trades Private credit stress sours sentiment further April 9 (Reuters) - U.S. software shares tumbled on ...
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March 25 (Reuters) - Legal software firm Harvey has raised $200 million at an $11 billion valuation and will use some of the funds to expand its artificial intelligence agent ‌as investor appetite for ...
Anthropic has been scrambling to contain a self-inflicted mess after it accidentally leaked a treasure trove of internal code that powers one of its most valuable artificial intelligence tools, ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. The US jobs report on Friday was surprisingly strong. That's not the only part of the job market ...
Over half of engineering teams now consistently use AI coding tools Top adopters report double pull request throughput compared with low adopters Autonomous agents now handle an increasing share of ...
The term "vibe coding" was coined by OpenAI cofounder Andrej Karpathy in February 2025. "It's not really coding," he posted on X, "I just see stuff, say stuff, run stuff, and copy paste stuff, and it ...