"Everyone is going to be able to vibe code video games by the end of 2025," Google's Logan Kilpatrick tweeted on Sunday, October 26, with about two months remaining in the year. "This is going to ...
If there’s a game or app you’d love to make, you might finally be able to do so without professional help. This article is republished with permission from Wonder Tools, a newsletter that helps you ...
Vibe coding has changed the game when it comes to creating something from nothing. While it has its limitations, it allows non-technical people to build apps or websites that they otherwise wouldn't ...
Apple brought the ban hammer down on an AI-powered iOS app. The Information reported that Apple pulled an app called "Anything" from the App Store. For the unfamiliar, Anything is/was an app based ...
Blake has over a decade of experience writing for the web, with a focus on mobile phones, where he covered the smartphone boom of the 2010s and the broader tech scene. When he's not in front of a ...
What if you could build anything—a game, a website, or even a fully functional app, without writing a single line of code? Imagine describing your vision in plain language and watching it come to life ...
She let her 5-year-old vibe code a game. Her son had no technical vocabulary, but he managed to prompt the AI and pick up key skills.
Just as calculators took over the tedious number-crunching in maths a few decades ago, artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming coding. Take Kyo, an eight-year-old boy in Singapore who developed a ...
The vibe-coding app Anything was pulled from the App Store, but the developer claimed victory after a return. Victory was fleeting, as the app is gone again, and nobody is saying why. Anything, a vibe ...
Apple has quietly blocked AI "vibe coding" apps, such as Replit and Vibecode, from releasing App Store updates unless they make changes, The Information reports. "Vibe coding" tools allow users with ...