China’s latest viral coding app has turned a niche developer tool into a mass-market spectacle, promising anyone a personal AI engineer that can build software from a few lines of natural language.
Apple has quietly blocked AI "vibe coding" apps, such as Replit and Vibecode, from releasing App Store updates unless they make changes, The Information reports. "Vibe coding" tools allow users with ...
LingGuang, Ant Group's vibe coding app, got so popular that its function briefly crashed. The Chinese AI coding assistant surged to over 2 million downloads in six days, the company said. The app hit ...
A few weeks ago, The Information reported that Apple had pulled the vibe coding app “Anything” from the App Store. Apple claimed the Anything app violated “longstanding App Store rules that say an app ...
Apple pushes back on vibe coding apps like Replit and Vibecode over App Store rules, raising questions about how AI-built apps fit within platform guidelines. Software developers have been using AI to ...
Apple is cracking down on “vibe coding” apps that allow users with little to no programming experience to build apps or websites using natural language prompts, reports The Information (a subscription ...
Apple has removed a "vibe coding" app from its App Store, reports The Information. AI app building app "Anything" was pulled from the ‌App Store‌, and Anything co-founder Dhruv Amin was told that his ...
As reported by The Information, Apple pulled vibe coding app ‘Anything’ from the App Store last week, citing a self-containment rule from its App Review Guidelines. Here are the details. A few days ...