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posted an update 2 days ago
6 Comprehensive Resources on AI Coding AI coding is moving fast, and it’s getting harder to tell what actually works. Agents, workflows, context management and many other aspects are reshaping how software gets built. We’ve collected a set of resources to help you understand how AI coding is evolving today and what building strategies work best: 1. https://huggingface.co/papers/2508.11126 Provides a clear taxonomy, compares agent architectures, and exposes practical gaps in tools, benchmarks, and reliability that AI coding agents now struggle with 2. https://huggingface.co/papers/2511.04427 This survey from Carnegie Mellon University shows causal evidence that LLM agent assistants deliver short-term productivity gains but have lasting quality costs that can slow development over time 3. https://huggingface.co/papers/2510.12399 Turns Vibe Coding from hype into a structured field, categorizing real development workflows. It shows which models, infrastructure, tool requirements, context, and collaboration setups affect real software development outcomes 4. https://huggingface.co/papers/2511.18538 (from Chinese institutes and companies like ByteDance and Alibaba) Compares real code LLMs, shows how training and alignment choices affect code quality and security, and connects academic benchmarks to everyday software development 5. Build Your Own Coding Agent via a Step-by-Step Workshop⟶ https://github.com/ghuntley/how-to-build-a-coding-agent A great guide that covers the basics of building an AI-powered coding assistant – from a chatbot to a file reader/explorer/editor and code search 6. State of AI Coding: Context, Trust, and Subagents⟶ https://www.turingpost.com/p/aisoftwarestack Here is our in-depth analysis of where AI coding is heading and the new directions we see today – like agent swarms and context management importance – offering an emerging playbook beyond the IDE If you like it, also subscribe to the Turing Post: https://www.turingpost.com/subscribe
replied to their post 9 days ago
15 Outstanding Research Papers from NeurIPS 2025 NeurIPS 2025, as a premier annual event in machine learning and computational neuroscience, tackles major topics like the future of AI, current research, and the most difficult challenges. While we’re not attending this year, we’re closely following the updates and today we pull together a quick, easy-to-digest roundup of a few standout papers so you can jump in without getting overwhelmed. Here is a list of 15 papers from NeurIPS 2025, including 8 top research papers that received awards, along with 7 others that caught our attention: 1. Faster R-CNN: Towards Real-Time Object Detection with Region Proposal Networks → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/test-of-time/128328 Test of Time Award winner. Introduces the RPN, a small convnet that predicts objectness and boxes on shared features, enabling Faster R-CNN to share computation and run around 5 fps on a GPU 2. Artificial Hivemind: The Open-Ended Homogeneity of LMs (and Beyond) → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/poster/121421 Releases a huge open-ended prompt dataset, showing that LLMs often fall into an “artificial hivemind” – generate surprisingly similar answers – and measuring diversity collapse 3. Optimal Mistake Bounds for Transductive Online Learning → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/poster/119098 Settles a 30-year-old question by showing how much unlabeled data helps in online learning – it gives a precise quadratic advantage with tight matching bounds 4. Gated Attention for LLMs: Non-linearity, Sparsity, and Attention-Sink-Free → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/poster/120216 Demonstrates how gating actually affects attention: a simple sigmoid gate after Scaled Dot-Product Attention (SDPA) boosts performance, stability, and long-context behavior by adding useful nonlinearity and sparse modulation Read further below ⬇️ Also, subscribe to the Turing Post: https://www.turingpost.com/subscribe
posted an update 9 days ago
15 Outstanding Research Papers from NeurIPS 2025 NeurIPS 2025, as a premier annual event in machine learning and computational neuroscience, tackles major topics like the future of AI, current research, and the most difficult challenges. While we’re not attending this year, we’re closely following the updates and today we pull together a quick, easy-to-digest roundup of a few standout papers so you can jump in without getting overwhelmed. Here is a list of 15 papers from NeurIPS 2025, including 8 top research papers that received awards, along with 7 others that caught our attention: 1. Faster R-CNN: Towards Real-Time Object Detection with Region Proposal Networks → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/test-of-time/128328 Test of Time Award winner. Introduces the RPN, a small convnet that predicts objectness and boxes on shared features, enabling Faster R-CNN to share computation and run around 5 fps on a GPU 2. Artificial Hivemind: The Open-Ended Homogeneity of LMs (and Beyond) → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/poster/121421 Releases a huge open-ended prompt dataset, showing that LLMs often fall into an “artificial hivemind” – generate surprisingly similar answers – and measuring diversity collapse 3. Optimal Mistake Bounds for Transductive Online Learning → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/poster/119098 Settles a 30-year-old question by showing how much unlabeled data helps in online learning – it gives a precise quadratic advantage with tight matching bounds 4. Gated Attention for LLMs: Non-linearity, Sparsity, and Attention-Sink-Free → https://neurips.cc/virtual/2025/loc/san-diego/poster/120216 Demonstrates how gating actually affects attention: a simple sigmoid gate after Scaled Dot-Product Attention (SDPA) boosts performance, stability, and long-context behavior by adding useful nonlinearity and sparse modulation Read further below ⬇️ Also, subscribe to the Turing Post: https://www.turingpost.com/subscribe
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