Josh Fruhlinger
Contributing Writer

Developers set the pace for genAI tools adoption

Generative AI vendors are quickly learning not to ignore developers, or developer experience, in the rush to bring new AI tools to market.

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The increasingly weird interactions between everyday people and ChatGPT may make more headlines, but developers are setting the pace for AIโ€™s future. Whether itโ€™s coding assistants auditioning (sometimes erratically) as copilots, development platforms vying to offer the smoothest AI-driven developer experience, or tech giants like Oracle and Microsoft angling for developer loyalty, our picks this month highlight some of the biggest battles in genAI todayโ€”all aiming to win the hearts and minds of builders.

Top picks for generative AI readers on InfoWorld

What the AI coding assistants get right, and where they go wrong
Think of AI coding assistants as bright but distractable interns: they can be very helpful, but they also have serious quirks. Hereโ€™s a look at the best and worst of six leading AI copilots.

The AI platform wars will be won on the developer experience
Whoever makes building AI into applications a seamless developer experience will win a big piece of the future. Right now, Microsoft appears to be leading the pack, almost by accident.

The key to Oracleโ€™s AI future
As the database of choice for a huge swath of enterprises, Oracle is in a unique position to provide the data support big companies crave for their AI projects. But will developers get on board?

9 APIs youโ€™ll love for AI integration and automated workflows
APIs have long offered developers access to data and functionality from a variety of sources. Now, a new crop of APIs is connecting apps to AI integrations.

More good reads and generative AI updates elsewhere

Are genAI shortcuts making attackers easier to catch?
Thereโ€™s been much ado about the next generation of developers relying on AI rather than learning comp-sci fundamentals. Now it appears the next generation of cybercriminals is making the same mistake.

Reddit releases new โ€˜Community Intelligenceโ€™ ad tools
Redditโ€™s very human peer-to-peer discussions provide a broad pool of data used to train many prominent AI tools. Now, the company is offering AI-driven insights to advertisers based on user-generated content.

Exposed developer secrets are a big problem, and AI is making them worse
Leaving plaintext passwords or SSH keys in human-readable code is a hallmark of inexperienced or overworked developers. But a recent report found that repos integrated with an AI copilot were 40% more likely to contain leaked secrets than those without.

Josh Fruhlinger

Josh Fruhlinger is a writer and editor who has been covering technology since the first dot-com boom. His interests include cybersecurity, programming tools and techniques, internet and open source culture, and what causes tech projects to fail. He won a 2025 AZBEE Award for a feature article on refactoring AI code and his coverage of generative AI earned him a Jesse H. Neal Award in 2024. In 2015 he published The Enthusiast, a novel about what happens when online fan communities collide with corporate marketing schemes. He lives in Los Angeles.

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