Anthropic’s Claude models are now generally available in Microsoft Foundry, giving Azure developers and enterprise application teams another major frontier model option inside Microsoft’s cloud AI ...
A wave of recent product updates suggests the competition among AI coding tools is moving beyond autocomplete and chat toward long-running agents that can understand projects, invoke tools, and carry ...
New root cause analysis technology gives AI coding agents the ability to diagnose application failures and deliver actionable debugging insights with less developer involvement.
Sadly, there’s no time to take your time these days. By the time you’ve tweaked your wonderful new UX, someone else has snuck in and stolen your potential customers. This article will show how a CIAM ...
The release includes an embedded MCP server that exposes Spring project analytics to AI coding assistants, along with first-class support for Spring AI and automated property refactoring.
The Java Community Process formally launches development of Java SE 28, with Project Valhalla once again positioned as the release's most closely watched feature.
Gradle has released Gradle 9.6, adding improvements aimed at faster build performance, cleaner automation, and earlier preparation for changes planned in Gradle 10.
Open-source Java projects advance Jakarta EE compatibility, persistence capabilities, and developer tooling as enterprise teams prepare for the next generation of Java applications.
The latest Eclipse Theia release isn’t the kind of announcement that arrives with fireworks, sweeping claims, or a promise to reinvent software development by lunchtime. That’s probably a good thing.
Nine Java Enhancement Proposals make the final cut as OpenJDK shifts from feature development to bug fixing ahead of a September release.
Loop engineering, a new phrase circulating among AI developers, is becoming a way to describe how software teams are trying to get more value from coding agents: not by writing better one-off prompts, ...
Ol' Linus is at it again. Outspoken Linux creator Linus Torvalds last week, in his usual imitable style, blasted a volunteer developer for not fixing a problem and basically "fired" the guy from ...