AI Embeddings: Smaller, Smarter, and Now Open Source
Forget the trade-off between language breadth and model size. IBM's new Granite Embedding Multilingual R2 models shatter expectations, offering 200+ language support with Apache 2.0 licensing.
Forget the trade-off between language breadth and model size. IBM's new Granite Embedding Multilingual R2 models shatter expectations, offering 200+ language support with Apache 2.0 licensing.
GitHub Copilot's individual plans are getting a significant overhaul in June 2026, introducing new tiers and a confusing 'flex allotment' system. Developers better check their wallets.
Forget Jira tickets. Imagine your code repository as a procedurally generated roguelike dungeon. That's the reality now thanks to GitHub Copilot CLI's latest feat.
Ever wondered how to jump into the vast ocean of open source software? This guide demystifies the process, showing even novice developers how to find and contribute to projects they care about on GitHub.
Organizations are increasingly relying on open source, but a significant portion are only consuming it. New data suggests this passive approach is a costly mistake, leaving substantial business value on the table.
Appwrite's latest release, 1.9.0, ditches its SQLite-only approach for self-hosted deployments, officially embracing MongoDB as a first-class database option. This, alongside significant AI tooling and infrastructure upgrades, signals a maturation of the open-source backend-as-a-service platform.
The promise of open-source software – rapid innovation and accessibility – often hits a wall when it comes to enterprise adoption. Users are feeling the pinch, sparking discussions about a potential open-source rebellion.
GitHub Copilot has processed over 60 million reviews, a 10x surge in less than a year. More than one in five code reviews on GitHub now involve an agent, a trend that's outpacing human review capacity and introducing hidden technical debt.
AI agents are writing code at breakneck speed. GitHub's latest move aims to build a safety net. But is it enough to prevent disaster?
After over two decades, the PHP Group has officially retired its proprietary licenses, opting for the universally recognized BSD 3-Clause. This move signals a significant shift towards standardization in open-source licensing.
GitHub is once again allowing its AI to train on public user data. The reversal, after significant backlash, raises fresh questions about control and ownership in the age of AI-generated code.
Remember Phabricator? GitHub's latest feature, Stacked PRs, aims to bring back a certain brand of developer workflow. But is it a genuine innovation or just a fond, dusty throwback?
Forget the proprietary giants. The Netherlands is quietly forging its own path in government code hosting, choosing a fully open-source solution. This move signals a strategic pivot towards digital sovereignty and vendor independence.
The buzz around agentic systems is palpable, and GitHub is leaning in with a dedicated community event for OpenClaw, one of the fastest-growing open-source projects. This is where the future of AI-powered workflows is being forged, beyond mere prompts.
The daunting chasm between wanting to contribute to open source and actually doing it is often a mental hurdle. The 'First Contributions' project aims to bridge that gap, one pull request at a time.
GitHub Copilot CLI is no longer a one-trick pony. A new split between interactive and non-interactive modes offers flexibility, but is it enough to avoid the same old AI pitfalls?
GitHub's latest tutorial walks beginners through Markdown, but is this lightweight markup language truly a game-changer, or just another thing to learn?
GitHub had a critical remote code execution vulnerability on its hands. The good news? No one exploited it. The bad news? It happened.
GitHub's AI coding assistant is fundamentally changing how you pay for it. Starting in 2026, expect a shift from per-request fees to a consumption-based model for Copilot.
After 13 years of dedicated development, the maintainer of pgBackRest has announced they can no longer support the project. This isn't just a codebase going quiet; it's a potential vulnerability for countless PostgreSQL deployments worldwide.