Would you trust an AI bot to find the fix for vulnerabilities in your code?

On this episode: Eitan Worcel, CEO and cofounder of Mobb, a company that uses AI to automate security vulnerability remediation, talks about how AI can help reduce security backlogs and free up developers’ time, what security risks emerge with GenAI, and why we still need a human in the loop. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/02/16/would-you-trust-an-ai-bot-to-find-the-fix-for-vulnerabilities-in-your-code/

Exploring the inclusive tech revolution

On this sponsored episode of the podcast, Ben and Ryan chat with Maya Sellon, inclusive design and digital accessibility principal at Shell, about how she’s scaling accessibility and inclusive design practice across an organization the size of Shell. They talk about how knowing the accessibility issues is half the battle, how people are the key to scale, and what video games teach us about inclusive design. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/02/14/exploring-the-inclusive-tech-revolution/

The creator of PyTorch Lightning on the AI hype cycle

The home team chats with William Falcon, an AI researcher and creator of PyTorch Lightning, about developing tooling for the AI ecosystem, open-source contributions, what happens when widely hyped technology needs to scale, and why he’s bullish on experienced developers using AI but not so bullish on new devs doing the same. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/02/13/the-creator-of-pytorch-lightning-on-the-ai-hype-cycle/

How to beat Doom in just 600 years

Ben and Ryan check in about complex images (an maybe even interactive games) encoded in living cells, the latest trends in prompt engineering, and the benefits of gaming to your education. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/01/16/how-to-beat-doom-in-just-600-years/

Compression is understanding

The home team chats about machine learning and its applications beyond the hot topic of GenAI, what it means for models to unlearn data, the future of open source, and new frontiers in game development. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/01/26/compression-is-understanding/

Agile works great...to a certain size

The home team convenes to discuss AI deepfakes, the legal implications of generating an AI version of a dead comedian or a famous singer-songwriter, whether leaderboard rankings for AI models reflect reality, and the relationship between agile development and burnout. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/01/30/ai-generated-controversy/

Inside Intuit's generative AI operating system, GenOS

In today’s episode of the podcast, sponsored by Intuit, Ben and Ryan talk with Shivang Shah, Chief Architect at Intuit Mailchimp, and Merrin Kurian, Principal Engineer and AI Platform Architect at Intuit. They discuss generative AI at Intuit, GenOS (the generative AI operating system that they built), and how GenAI can scale without sacrificing privacy. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/01/31/inside-intuit-s-generative-ai-system-genos/

How to beat Doom in just 600 years

Ben and Ryan discuss how complex images (and maybe even interactive games) are being encoded in living cells, the latest trends in prompt engineering, and the educational benefits of gaming. https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/02/02/your-prompts-need-a-vibe-check/

How to build cloud-native applications for multi-architecture infrastructure

There are new ways to leverage different CPU architectures to increase application performance and reduce cloud compute costs. Making the cloud-native stack multi-architecture ready helps applications run on the right hardware in cloud environments.

https://stackoverflow.blog/2024/02/05/how-to-build-cloud-native-applications-for-multi-architecture-infrastructure/


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