AI Agents: Stop Overpaying for Models Now
Your AI agent defaults to pricey models, torching budgets on simple jobs. WhichModel flips that with cost-aware picks, saving thousands monthly.
Your AI agent defaults to pricey models, torching budgets on simple jobs. WhichModel flips that with cost-aware picks, saving thousands monthly.
Picture this: 25 data protection watchdogs across Europe emailing your compliance team right now, demanding proof of every personal data touch in your AI agent's wild, unpredictable sessions. Most can't answer. Yet.
Ever wonder why your favorite thriller now stars a supercomputer instead of a mustache-twirling spy? AI's hijacking TV villain roles, mirroring our real tech terrors with chilling accuracy.
Your finance team's month-end vanish act? It's costing thousands in labor, delays, and errors. Time to kill the Excel invoice matching nightmare.
Merck's spokesperson shuts it down fast: 'It's not a vaccine.' Moderna's dodging political heat by rebranding its promising cancer tech—but at what cost to science and patients?
Picture this: your code runs flawlessly, yet users vanish. Blame design—88% bounce in seconds, per NN/g research.
Cyber crooks just upped their game in the GlassWorm campaign, slipping a Zig dropper into a phony WakaTime tracker that chains infections across all your IDEs. It's not just VS Code—think Cursor, VSCodium, the works.
Ever wonder why some justices' memoirs feel like polished PR, while Anthony Kennedy's bursts with literary magic? It's a window into the human spark AI legal tools still chase.
A random repo with 1516 lines of code gets dissected in phases: structure, architecture, then findings with proofs-of-concept. Hakira promises to spotlight bugs humans overlook—but at a credit cost.
A PR pings: modal fails axe scan. Fixed in 10 minutes, shipped. That's incremental accessibility—not a dream, but daily reality at a frantic news startup.
He wrote the code. Tests passed. Production hummed. But he couldn't explain a single line. AI's seduction is real — and it's quietly eroding devs' judgment.
Heart attack at 63, right before Brown v. Board. Frederick Vinson, the ultimate Washington insider, leaves a bench divided and a legacy unfinished. But what if he'd lived?
AI agents churning out comics, hopping from Google's ADK to AWS ECS Express. Sounds futuristic. Feels like a headache.
Log in to drop a WireGuard security patch. Account gone. No warning, no appeal. That's the nightmare hitting open source maintainers—and Windows users pay the price.
Stunning numbers: Women now claim nearly all new US jobs, leaving men in the dust. Is Trump's manufacturing revival a fantasy, or do men need to rethink 'manly' work?
Prop traders braced for ironclad rules at Apex. Then bam—Consistency Rule doubles to 50%. Scalpers cheer, but the math favors the firm's wallet.
You grab HWMonitor to check your CPU temps, click download, and boom—malware's rifling through your browser passwords. That's the nightmare CPUID users faced this week.
Roughly 1,000 Binance employees in the UAE — 20% of its global headcount — just got offers to bolt to safer spots like Hong Kong or Tokyo. Missiles and drones have turned the crypto hub into a hot zone, testing the exchange's regional bet.
Picture this: legacy Ruby apps lurking in the shadows, Redis connections anonymous and untraceable. One dev's monkey patch turns the tide, injecting smarts where none existed.
Samsung's shoving AirDrop vibes onto older Galaxies like the S24 series through a beta. But after 20 years watching this circus, I'm asking: does it actually fix the iOS-Android file-sharing nightmare, or just pad Samsung's retention stats?