The VS Code 1.110 cycle is putting more 'hands-on' capabilities into chat, led by native browser integration that lets AI agents interact with page elements, capture screenshots, and pull real-time ...
DUBLIN, Jan. 27, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- BrowserStack, the world's leading software testing platform, today announced the launch of Accessibility DevTools, expanding into IDEs to help teams detect and ...
Microsoft is expanding its quantum software stack with new developer tools designed to make quantum application development more accessible, while laying the groundwork for fault-tolerant quantum ...
Most Go developers are using AI-powered development tools, but their satisfaction has been hindered by quality concerns, according to the 2025 Go Developer Survey. Most Go language developers are ...
Some developers swear by Tailwind CSS, while others can’t stand it. This video explores the biggest issues people face when using it, from cluttered HTML to confusing utility classes. We dive into why ...
Mozilla is adding a global "AI kill switch" to Firefox, giving users a single option to permanently disable all AI tools in the browser. Developer Jake Archibald confirmed on Mastodon that the new ...
The browser has become the main interface to GenAI for most enterprises: from web-based LLMs and copilots, to GenAI‑powered extensions and agentic browsers like ChatGPT Atlas. Employees are leveraging ...
Additional features include an agentic browsing assistant, contextual page questions, enhanced scam detection, smart notification filtering, and one-click password changes. Furthermore, Chrome’s AI ...
Discover 21+ browser dev tools and tips that every web developer should know. We cover features that save time, simplify debugging, and optimize your workflow. These practical tips are designed to ...
The malware authors associated with a Phishing-as-a-Service (PhaaS) kit known as Sneaky 2FA have incorporated Browser-in-the-Browser (BitB) functionality into their arsenal, underscoring the continued ...
A new proof-of-concept attack shows that malicious Model Context Protocol servers can inject JavaScript into Cursor’s browser — and potentially leverage the IDE’s privileges to perform system tasks.