Researcher warns that many .NET applications might be vulnerable to arbitrary file writes because .NET’s HTTP client proxy ...
In the popular children’s book “Charlotte’s Web,” the title character, a spider, uses her web as an instrument of good to help secure the freedom of Wilbur, a pig on her farm. Federal immigration ...
I’ve written a few small command-line utilities in C# using .NET 8, which I’ve published on GitHub. They’re developed on Windows, but I provide prebuilt binaries for Windows, Linux, and macOS. For ...
X has announced a new pay-per-use self-serve API model in hopes of luring developers back to the platform. Credit: Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images Good news! Elon Musk's X has heard the cries ...
There are plenty of open-source web browsers available. No matter what platform you use, there's an open-source app. Each of these web browsers is free to install and use. How much time do you spend ...
Google has added a new feature called Gemini CLI Extensions to its command-line AI tool, Gemini CLI. This lets outside companies add their software directly into Gemini CLI. At launch, the extensions ...
How to configure the CORS middleware for minimal APIs and enable secure cross-origin resource sharing in your ASP.NET Core applications. ASP.NET Core offers a simplified hosting model, called minimal ...
Some of the largest providers of large language models (LLMs) have sought to move beyond multimodal chatbots — extending their models out into "agents" that can actually take more actions on behalf of ...
Google wants its coding assistant, Jules, to be far more integrated into developers’ terminals than ever. The company wants to make it a more workflow-native tool, hoping that more people will use it ...
In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web to open the internet to the masses. His life-changing invention of HTTP and URLs paved the way for the massive network of data we interact with ...
Tim Berners-Lee may have the smallest fame-to-impact ratio of anyone living. Strangers hardly ever recognize his face; on “Jeopardy!,” his name usually goes for at least sixteen hundred dollars.