Some of Cursor's biggest AI features didn't start on a roadmap. They were bottom-up projects built by its engineers, says Jason Ginsberg.
Cursor 2.0 just landed and it’s packed with features that make AI-assisted coding feel unfair. The biggest upgrade is Git ...
Cursor’s experiment shows how AI is shifting from answering prompts to running real projects—hinting at a future where ...
Infosys, a global leader in next-generation digital services and consulting, announced a strategic collaboration with Cursor, ...
The era of the AI "Copilot", a helpful assistant that writes a few lines of code while you watch, might already be ending. In ...
What if coding didn’t have to start with chaos? Imagine tackling a complex software project, not with scattered ideas and frantic trial-and-error, but with a clear, structured roadmap guiding every ...
Companies staffed by humans are divided into managers and employees, and it seems that AI organizations could be structured ...
For developers, every second counts, and the AI tools you use can make or break your productivity. Enter Cursor, a deceptively simple AI coding tool that, when mastered, can transform the way you code ...
Infosys partners with Cursor to boost AI-powered software engineering, launching a Center of Excellence and integrating Cursor with Infosys Topaz Fabric. Shares of Infosys Ltd ended marginally higher ...
Cursor announced it has closed a $2.3 billion funding round at a $29.3 billion post-money valuation. The startup built a popular AI coding tool that helps software developers generate, edit and review ...
Some of Cursor's biggest AI features began as tools engineers built for themselves. Cursor's engineering head says the company has roadmaps, but many of its biggest features were developed bottom-up.