Posted by msmash from Slashdot
From the how-about-that department: Software engineer Sean Goedecke argues that AI coding agents have already been commoditized because they require no special technical advantages, just better base models. He writes: All of a sudden, it's the year of AI coding agents. Claude released Claude Code, OpenAI released their Codex agent, GitHub released its own autonomous coding agent, and so on. I've done my fair share of writing about whether AI coding agents will replace developers, and in the meantime how best to use them in your work. Instead, I want to make what I think is now a pretty firm observation: AI coding agents have no secret sauce.
[...] The reason everyone's doing agents now is the same reason everyone's doing reinforcement learning now -- from one day to the next, the models got good enough. Claude Sonnet 3.7 is the clear frontrunner here. It's not the smartest model (in my opinion), but it is the most agentic: it can stick with a task and make good decisions over time better than other models with more raw brainpower. But other AI labs have more agentic models now as well. There is no moat.
There's also no moat to the actual agent code. It turns out that "put the model in a loop with a 'read file' and 'write file' tool" is good enough to do basically anything you want. I don't know for sure that the closed-source options operate like this, but it's an educated guess. In other words, the agent hackers in 2023 were correct, and the only reason they couldn't build Claude Code then was that they were too early to get to use the really good models.
Posted by msmash from Slashdot
From the tussle-continues department: Reuters: The European Union's landmark rules on AI will be rolled out according to the legal timeline in the legislation, the European Commission said on Friday, dismissing calls from some companies and countries for a pause.
Google owner Alphabet, Facebook owner Meta and other U.S. companies as well as European businesses such as Mistral and ASML have in recent days urged the Commission to delay the AI Act by years. Financial Times adds: In an open letter, seen by the Financial Times, the heads of 44 major firms on the continent called on European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to introduce a two-year pause, warning that unclear and overlapping regulations are threatening the bloc's competitiveness in the global AI race.
[...] The current debate surrounds the drafting of a "code of practice," which will provide guidance to AI companies on how to implement the act that applies to powerful AI models such as Google's Gemini, Meta's Llama and OpenAI's GPT-4. Brussels has already delayed publishing the code, which was due in May, and is now expected to water down the rules.
Posted by from MMO Champion
Enter the World of Warcraft Cosplay Contest at Gamescom 2025!
Originally Posted by Blizzard
(
Blue Tracker /
Official Forums)
World of Warcraft is returning to
gamescom 2025, and so is our traditional Cosplay Contest!
On Saturday 23 August at 15:00 CEST, step into the spotlight at the World of Warcraft booth in Hall 8 and bring your character to life. Whether you’re a stoic footman of Stormwind, a member of the Forsaken, or just a lone murloc looking to make a little mayhem, this is your moment to shine. Glory, epic prizes, and the cheers of the crowd await!
How to Enter
Participates age 13 and older will need to fill out the official entry form below before 21 July 2025. Once the form closes, no further entries will be accepted.
Apply Here!
Terms and Conditions
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