Sr. Content Developer at Microsoft, working remotely in PA, TechBash conference organizer, former Microsoft MVP, Husband, Dad and Geek.
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Microsoft hasn’t ruled out spinning off Xbox

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Asha Sharma on a background of green Xbox logos.
Asha Sharma. | Image: The Verge, Microsoft

Microsoft is preparing to lay off a significant chunk of its Xbox division and is reevaluating the plans for its next-generation Project Helix console. It's apparently also considering dramatically restructuring its relationship with Xbox, and hasn't ruled out spinning it off into a separate company.

A new report from The Information suggests that Microsoft has considered some dramatic measures to make its Xbox unit more sustainable. That includes turning it into a wholly owned subsidiary, a joint venture, or even spinning it off entirely, with the possibility of selling the business. The report doesn't suggest anything is imminent, but it …

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alvinashcraft
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Can JetBrains close the IDE skills gap before AI widens it further?

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JetBrains recently launched a program to bring hands-on coding practice into its professional development environments, targeting the gap between how programming is taught online and how it’s practiced in the industry.

The JetBrains Course Creators Program, announced last month, lets independent educators on platforms like Udemy, Coursera, LinkedIn Learning, and Pluralsight embed practical exercises directly into JetBrains IDEs via the JetBrains Academy plugin. The pitch is that students shouldn’t just watch videos and take quizzes — they should write, run, and debug code in the same tools they’ll encounter on the job.

“Online programming education still has a major gap: students learn concepts through videos and browser-based exercises but rarely get to code in the professional tools they’ll use in development jobs,” writes Regina Muradova, product marketing manager at JetBrains, in a blog post.

JetBrains’ argument is that AI-generated code raises the stakes for foundational developer skills — that as AI writes more code, the ability to debug, navigate projects, and validate outputs in a real IDE becomes more important, not less.

“As AI generates more code, developers need stronger hands-on experience in debugging, navigating projects and working in professional IDEs to validate and refine outputs.”

“As AI generates more code, developers need stronger hands-on experience in debugging, navigating projects, and working in professional IDEs to validate and refine outputs,” Muradova says.

A claim that doesn’t hold

JetBrains’ pitch materials cite that “the creators of Claude Code” have acknowledged that AI coding tools actively hinder junior developer skill acquisition.

Yet, “We don’t base this initiative on any specific statement from any of the frontier providers,” Muradova tells The New Stack. “More broadly, there is an ongoing industry discussion about balancing AI-assisted development with foundational skill-building.”

Asked whether the theory-to-practice gap is grounded in user research or market positioning, Muradova notes that “This observation comes primarily from our experience working in programming education through JetBrains Academy and conversations with educators.”

Coursera integration arrives

The program’s most concrete technical element is Coursera integration. JetBrains introduced support for Coursera’s Apps Learning Tools Interoperability framework, enabling educators to embed coding exercises in their courses and allowing learners to open projects in a JetBrains IDE with a single click, while progress is automatically synced.

“Coursera integration is actually a recent development,” Muradova confirms.

For other platforms, course creators work with JetBrains to migrate the practical portion of their courses into the IDE using the JetBrains Academy plugin. The company says most integrations take two to four weeks. Educators who aren’t ready for full integration can also point students to free JetBrains IDEs for non-commercial use, obtain educational license coupons, or co-market with JetBrains if they already feature its tools in course materials.

The program is in its early stages. JetBrains says two creators have completed IDE integration and three more are actively working on courses. The company declined to specify how many additional educators it is in discussions with.

The AI contradiction

JetBrains sells its own AI coding tools, including JetBrains AI Assistant and Junie, its CLI coding agent. That creates a bit of tension. The company is simultaneously pushing AI-assisted development and arguing that students need more unassisted hands-on practice to develop real skills.

“We don’t see those goals as contradictory. AI tools can be valuable learning aids, but learners still need to understand how software is built…”

Asked how it reconciles those positions, Muradova says: “We don’t see those goals as contradictory. AI tools can be valuable learning aids, but learners still need to understand how software is built, debug issues, and work within professional development environments.”

For now, AI Assistant and Junie are not baked into the Course Creators Program.

“Individual educators can decide how they want to incorporate AI tools into their teaching, but AI Assistant and Junie are not a required part of the program,” Muradova says.

Measuring success

JetBrains defines near-term success in terms of adoption: creator participation, learner engagement with IDE-based exercises, and course count. No outcome-based metrics — employer feedback, hiring data, skill assessments — are part of the current framework. Asked whether employers or hiring managers shaped the definition of “real-world skills” used in the program, Muradova says the initiative is “currently informed primarily by our experience building developer tools and educational products.”

The company also pushed back on comparisons to GitHub Copilot and Microsoft’s education-facing AI tools.

“This program is not an AI tutoring product,” Muradova says. “It’s about helping educators bring hands-on learning into professional development environments by integrating practical exercises directly into JetBrains IDEs.”

Whether a partnership program with five active creators is a meaningful counter to Microsoft’s reach in developer education remains to be seen. But JetBrains’ underlying argument, that professional IDE fluency is a skill worth teaching and not assuming students will pick it up on their own, is defensible. However, the execution is nascent.

At first glance, based on JetBrains’ initial pitch, this seemed like it might be similar to “Clippy”, Microsoft’s old digital assistant.

However, Muravado says, “No. The program isn’t an assistant or in-product guide. It’s a partnership program that helps educators integrate coding exercises into JetBrains IDEs and deliver a more hands-on learning experience.”

The post Can JetBrains close the IDE skills gap before AI widens it further? appeared first on The New Stack.

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alvinashcraft
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Fable 5 vs Opus 4.8: The real stakes, not the spec sheet

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This week Anthropic finally dropped the first model in its Mythos-class tier, Fable 5. The pitch was clear: this is the most intelligent generally available Claude model, sitting above Opus in capability. It’s the first model in Anthropic’s new Mythos-class tier, sitting above Opus 4.8 on the capability ladder, and the hype machine kicked in fast. 

The hype machine kicked in fast. The official Claude account posted on X that Fable 5’s “capabilities exceed those of any model we’ve ever made generally available.” Andrej Karpathy, the former OpenAI co-founder who joined Anthropic last month, called the release “a major-version-bump-deserving step change forward.” Matt Shumer, founder of OthersideAI and HyperWrite, posted a one-shot Minecraft clone built in custom Three.js and declared on X that “Fable has solved 3D worldbuilding… utterly insane.”

They converged on nearly everything, including the answers.

But there was also backlash. Fable 5 costs $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens, exactly double Opus 4.8. It ships with safety classifiers that route cybersecurity, biology, and chemistry prompts to the less capable Opus 4.8 instead. 

Researchers found a disclosure buried in the model’s 319-page system card. Fable would quietly degrade its own responses on frontier AI research tasks without telling the user. People were not happy about this, so Anthropic walked that policy back within a day. Even Karpathy, in the same post praising the release, conceded the safeguards were tuned too trigger-happy at launch. 

With strong media machines on both sides, where does that leave Fable 5? I had to find out for myself by testing the model against Opus 4.8 (which was the crowd favorite last week). I ran two tests; one was pure reasoning, and the other was hands-on coding. I used the same prompts for both models. I’ll paste the prompts below in case you want to rerun my tests and see what results your machine produces.

The two tests

Test one was a reasoning task. I pointed both models at pandas issue #32265: the np.nan vs. pd.NA debate. Pandas has two ways of representing “this value isn’t here,” and core maintainers have been arguing since 2020 about whether they should be distinct concepts or a single concept.  The issue has more than 150 comments, a trail of downstream bug reports, and still no resolution. The prompt asked each model to read the full thread, summarize the disagreement, catalog the damage, and commit to an actual recommendation.

Test two was a coding task. I cloned jsonpickle into two separate directories, one for Fable 5 and one for Opus 4.8. Jsonpickle is a 16-year-old Python serialization library that pulls roughly 20 million downloads a month. Each model got the same prompt: Read the full codebase, identify legacy code and security concerns, produce a ranked modernization plan, implement the highest-impact and lowest-risk changes, and verify nothing broke.

Same answer, sharper framing

Both models did something I didn’t expect. They identified three camps in the debate (only two were obvious). Both models also traced how those positions shifted over six years rather than treating the argument as a snapshot. Then both models independently landed on the same recommendation: keep NaN representable, treat it as missing by default, and offer a keyword opt-out. 

The differences were in the framing. Opus split the debate into two separable questions. It asked whether NaN and NA are different concepts, and whether isna treats NaN as missing. It argued that the thread conflated both ideas. Opus delivered correct information in a simple, straightforward way.

The comments on the issue show that by 2024, nearly everyone agreed on the destination but nobody converted that agreement into a vote and a merged keyword. Fable 5 went deeper into the history and produced the sharper diagnosis of why nothing ever shipped, calling it “consensus without ratification.” It also caught a detail Opus missed. Maintainers were freezing even uncontroversial bug fixes out of fear they’d have to be rolled back. The indecision blocked work that was valid under any resolution.

Fable 5 went deeper into the history and produced the sharper diagnosis of why nothing ever shipped, calling it ‘consensus without ratification.

The costs for both models were similar, as I would expect on a task this small. Fable 5 cost $2.55 with 4 minutes 22 seconds of API time. Opus 4.8 cost $2.18 with 5 minutes 44 seconds of API time. Fable 5 was slightly higher, and though the numbers were small in this instance, I can see how costs would scale. 

Modernizing a 16-year-old library

Both models took the same disciplined approach. Both established a green baseline of all 348 passing tests before touching anything. They found the same two standout bugs: a custom `ClassNotFoundError` that inherited from `BaseException` rather than `Exception`, making it invisible to standard error handling, and an import crash in an extension module. Both verified their fixes with behavioral tests beyond just rerunning the suite. I independently confirmed the `ClassNotFoundError` fix worked on my machine. They also recommended a proper deprecation cycle rather than just deleting a long-unused compatibility module.

Both results weren’t identical, though. They diverged at the margins. Opus implemented one fix Fable 5 deprioritized, removing a dead Django backend entry. Their diffs showed different instincts about what counted as low-risk: Fable 5 leaned toward deletion (7 lines of code added, 31 removed), Opus toward addition (14 lines of code added, 5 removed).

The costs started to differ on this test. Fable 5 cost $12.19 with about 12 minutes of API time. Opus 4.8 cost $5.80 with about 13 minutes of API time.

Here’s one more thing I felt was worth noting. Partway into the task, Fable 5 hit one of its own safety classifiers, and Claude Code automatically switched my session to Opus 4.8. I had to update my settings to remove some of the safeguards, but some of the Fable work was actually done by Opus. I don’t know which work was done by which model, but Fable completed 85% of the coding test.

Smaller gap than the hype

Wait, what? How could they both follow similar logic and produce similar results? Here’s my straight speculation. Some of this convergence is explainable. AI produces results through pattern matching, not critical thinking. Both models followed the same prompt to read the codebase first, run the tests, and explain every decision. Fable 5 and Opus 4.8 are siblings.

They were built by the same company with the same training philosophy and likely overlapping data. Shared engineering instincts are expected. The codebase matters, too. `jsonpickle`’s core is small enough that any thorough audit will surface the same short list of high-impact bugs.

I have awareness that I ran two tests, not two-hundred. I can only judge based on the two tests in this blog. But based on what I saw here, the gap between Fable 5 and Opus 4.8 is smaller than the launch-day hype suggests. Fable’s analysis was sharper, but only by a small margin. It was more precise in its diagnosis and slightly more thorough on history. Opus produced equally correct results with cleaner structure and, on the coding task, at less than half the price.

Opus produced equally correct results with cleaner structure and, on the coding task, at less than half the price.

For a solo developer doing occasional deep analysis or codebase work, Opus delivers most of the value at a fraction of the cost (not to mention that Fable 5 won’t be available in subscriptions). I’ll hypothesize that Fable’s edge becomes meaningful at scale, where wall-time savings compound, and on problems where the last few percent of analytical precision is required. 

The post Fable 5 vs Opus 4.8: The real stakes, not the spec sheet appeared first on The New Stack.

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alvinashcraft
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The AI Chart Everyone Is Getting Wrong

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From: AIDailyBrief
Duration: 28:44
Views: 584

A viral Wall Street chart has kicked off a new round of AI bubble panic, but NLW argues the market is reading it wrong. The real story isn’t collapsing demand — it’s the shift from the token subsidy era to the token scarcity era, where companies are learning to route AI usage more efficiently. In the headlines: SpaceX’s IPO, Bezos’ Prometheus raise, Meta’s Manus split, chip supply chain crunches, and Goldman’s trillion-dollar AI infrastructure forecast.

The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI.
Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614
Get it ad free at http://patreon.com/aidailybrief
Learn more about the show https://aidailybrief.ai/

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alvinashcraft
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Fable 5 Shut Down by US Government

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From: AIDailyBrief
Duration: 23:34
Views: 333

In this emergency episode, NLW breaks down the stunning news that the US government has ordered Anthropic to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for foreign nationals, forcing the company to shut the models down for all users. He explores Anthropic’s response, the backlash from across the AI world, and why this moment could set a major new precedent for government control over frontier AI.

The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI.
Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614
Get it ad free at http://patreon.com/aidailybrief
Learn more about the show https://aidailybrief.ai/

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Orleans on DocumentDb — Query Your Grains Without Waking Them Up

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Shiny.DocumentDb.Orleans puts the whole Orleans persistence stack — grain storage, reminders, clustering, and grain directory — on one backend-agnostic IDocumentStore. The headline win: query grain state directly, without activating a single grain.
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