We built a Claude Skill for Puma Scan — now Claude can run .NET security scans, interpret findings, and help developers fix vulnerabilities directly in their workflow.
@AnthropicAI
https://t.co/Vquoj11Ifg
We're going around the Moon. Come watch with us. Artemis II's four-astronaut crew is lifting off from @NASAKennedy on an approximately 10-day mission that will bring us closer to living on the Moon and Mars. The launch window opens at 6:24pm ET (2224 UTC). https://t.co/X27QJejNDt
Yo Meek, GitHub's the cypher spot for code kings,
Push your commits like fresh bars, no lost strings.
Repo's the vault, branches split the flow,
Pull requests merge the squad, watch the whole team glow.
Fork that beat, star the heat, fix issues on the grind,
Open source hustle, build empires, leave the fake behind.
Git tracks every move, no cap, pure shine,
Drop your project, ship it worldwide, that's the dream line!
@Clear are your terminals healthy? Been standing in Staples for 20 minutes watching it try to launch the Global Protect app and spin ( reboot and do it all again)
@NHLFlyers Y'all didn't have any commercials to spin. Get that advertising money and make it cheaper to park so we can all come to the games. Just going to let these guys talk during the break?
The evidence is clear: Either you embrace AI, or get out of this career.
Our latest field study with 22 developers who are integrating AI deeply into their workflows reveals a striking trend: those who persist beyond early skepticism emerge with dramatically higher ambition, technical fluency, and job satisfaction. They’re not writing less code – they’re enabling more complex, system-level work through orchestration. And that’s as true for educators as it is for developers themselves.
This shift isn’t hypothetical. It’s happening now. Developers move through clear adoption phases – from dabbling skeptics to strategic AI collaborators – and those who reach the final stage say their identity as developers has transformed. Their focus is no longer on producing code, but on designing systems, directing agents, and validating outputs. “My next title might be Creative Director of Code,” one developer told us. That’s not hyperbole – it’s real. Here’s what we’re seeing:
• AI is on track to write 90% of code within the next 2–5 years.
• Developers aren’t worried. They’re optimistic and realistic about the changes ahead.
• New skills matter now, e.g. agent orchestration, iterative collaboration, and critical verification.
• Time savings? Sure. But the real shift is ambition. Developers are raising the ceiling, not just lowering the cost.
This also has massive implications for education. Teaching syntax alone is obsolete. Students must now learn to guide AI, critique its work, and think across disciplines. Assessments should measure collaboration with AI, not isolation from it.
This is no longer a question of productivity. It’s a question of reinvention. The job of the software developer isn’t disappearing. It’s being reborn. ✨ https://t.co/7oGprPAUb1
#BSidesPhilly is back at Live! Casino and Hotel on Friday, December 5th!
Members of our team will be serving in various positions at #DefCon. Stop into Blue Team Village to see Chris (aka DaFinga).
Check out our new sponsor packages here https://t.co/SKRoSZMG0R
#BSP2025
Eagles 2018 celebration veteran Mike Wolf with advice on fans who wanna get close to the stage on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Mike is still undecided what spot he is gonna be to see the parade.
Right to the top for this. Your children's confidential data is breached before they reach 10 years old. At least I get free monitoring untill they turn 11? This is the new normal?
@cyber@CISAgov@CISACyber
https://t.co/yogz54eP05