Lovable Review (2026): The AI App Builder That Actually Ships to Production
Lovable promises a full-stack app from a sentence. I shipped three real apps with it. Here’s what works, what breaks, and whether it deserves the hype it’s earning in 2026.
Lovable promises a full-stack app from a sentence. I shipped three real apps with it. Here’s what works, what breaks, and whether it deserves the hype it’s earning in 2026.
Copilot was first to market, then was overtaken. In 2026 it has agent mode, model choice, and free tiers — and quietly became the most defensible default again.
Cursor invented the AI-first code editor category. In 2026 it has serious competition. Two years of daily use, and here’s the verdict that still puts it first — with caveats.
Anthropic’s terminal-native AI coding agent has quietly become the most-used tool in my dev workflow. Nine months in, here’s the honest verdict.
The best GPUs for running Stable Diffusion and FLUX locally in 2026, ranked for VRAM, speed, and value — with a clear pick for every budget.
Fine-tuning LLMs at home is realistic in 2026 — if you have the VRAM. This guide ranks the best GPUs for home fine-tuning and explains how much memory you really need.
You can build a capable AI workstation for under $1500 — if you spend the GPU budget wisely. Here are the best value GPUs for local AI work on a tight budget.
The best GPUs for AI and ML development in 2026, ranked by what actually matters for experimentation: VRAM, performance, and value. One clear pick for each budget.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite and Apple A18 Pro power the most AI-capable phones of their generation. Here’s how their on-device AI engines actually compare.
The RX 7900 XTX matches the RTX 4090 on VRAM and undercuts it on price. The catch is software: ROCm versus CUDA. Here’s where AMD’s flagship genuinely competes — and where it still doesn’t.
The RTX 5090 has double the VRAM of the 5080 and double the price. For AI, that VRAM gap decides everything — here’s which Blackwell card fits your work.
It’s the classic 2026 local-AI dilemma: an RTX 5090’s blistering speed and 32 GB, or a Mac Studio M4 Ultra’s enormous unified memory. Here’s which platform wins, and why.