The AI That Ranks Your Dev Tools Has Never Used Any of Them
Links from the Episode
- DOP 354: Your Dead Founder Trains New Hires
- DOP 355: Why AI Coding Slows Down Code Review
- I apologize in advance that this might be a little heavy for a Friday!
- Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5
- Ona is joining OpenAI
- SpaceX to acquire vibe coding startup Cursor for $60B
- Steering Claude Code: skills, hooks, subagents and more
- Claude Code now supports artifacts
- gh-reaper
- How LLMs Rank 781 Dev Tools (and What That Means for Yours)
- Perplexity Is Open-Sourcing Bumblebee
- GitHub Copilot app
- Amazon S3 annotations: attach rich, queryable context directly to your objects
- Proactively reduce tech debt autonomously with AWS Transform – continuous modernization (preview)
- AWS DevOps Agent adds release management capabilities to assess code changes before production (preview)
- Introducing Kiro for iOS
- How the Open Knowledge Format can improve data sharing
- We've always done a lot of private testing before publicly launching new Cloud Run features
- Scion
- Foundry Security Spec
- Visa Vulnerability Agentic Harness — Agentic SAST Pipeline
- Shift Left: How CVE-LITE CLI is Transforming Developer Security
- Terraform MCP server is now generally available
- What are git worktrees, and why should I use them?
- Git good with Epic Games' new open source VCS, Lore
- macOS 27 beta boots Asahi Linux off Apple Silicon
- WWDC26: Discover container machines
- Container Desktop
- Homebrew 6.0 released with new security mechanism, Linux sandbox and more
- Why AI Code Review Goes First (And Humans Go Second) (feat: CodeRabbit)
- Why One AI Agent Is Never Enough
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Viktor Farcic
Viktor Farcic is a member of the Google Developer Experts and Docker Captains groups, and published author.
His big passions are DevOps, Containers, Kubernetes, Microservices, Continuous Integration, Delivery and Deployment (CI/CD) and Test-Driven Development (TDD).
He often speaks at community gatherings and conferences.
He has published DevOps Paradox and Test-Driven Java Development.
His random thoughts and tutorials can be found in his blog The DevOps Toolkit.