Nithin Kamath highlights how LLMs evolved from hallucinations to Linus Torvalds-approved code, democratizing tech and transforming software development.
Earlier, Kamath highlighted a massive shift in the tech landscape: Large Language Models (LLMs) have evolved from “hallucinating" random text in 2023 to gaining the approval of Linus Torvalds in 2026.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. (NewsNation) — Comedian Craig Ferguson is trading in his late nights for a beloved, classic word game. He’s now hosting “Scrabble” ...
Free AI tools Goose and Qwen3-coder may replace a pricey Claude Code plan. Setup is straightforward but requires a powerful local machine. Early tests show promise, though issues remain with accuracy ...
This morning on “The Rhode Show” we were thrilled to welcome Host of ‘Scrabble’ on The CW, Craig Ferguson, as he chatted with Brendan Kirby about the show and all of the fun viewers can expect when ...
Alibaba unveiled Qwen3.5, an open-weight, 397-billion-parameter mixture-of-experts model that only wakes up 17 billion neurons per prompt. The payoff? You get 60% lower inference ...
Goose acts as the agent that plans, iterates, and applies changes. Ollama is the local runtime that hosts the model. Qwen3-coder is the coding-focused LLM that generates results. If you've been ...
Today, OpenAI launched a macOS desktop app for Codex, its large language model-based coding tool that was previously used through a command line interface (CLI) on the web or inside an integrated ...
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