Decart is launching Oasis 3, a real-time world model that generates photorealistic driving environments for autonomous vehicle testing, now available via API for developers to build on.
In this tutorial, we implement a QwenPaw workflow that provides a practical environment for building and testing an agent-powered assistant. We install and initialize QwenPaw, configure its working directory, set up authentication, connect optional model providers via Colab secrets, and create a structured workspace with custom skills and local knowledge files. We also launch the […]
The post How to Build a QwenPaw Agent Workspace with Custom Skills, Model Providers, Console Access, and Streaming API Testing appeared first on MarkTechPost.
Oasis 3's API integration could accelerate autonomous vehicle development by enabling safer, cost-effective testing in photorealistic simulations.
The post Decart launches Oasis 3 for photorealistic driving simulations via API appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Nansen's API enhancements empower traders with precise strategy validation and seamless operations, potentially boosting algorithmic trading efficiency.
The post Nansen API adds backtesting data and faster top-ups for strategy replay appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Meta's delay in releasing Muse Spark's API highlights execution challenges, impacting developer adoption and investor confidence in AI ventures.
The post Meta delays Muse Spark AI model API release for developers appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Crossmint launched a Visa powered API that lets developers enable AI agents to make card payments with tokenized credentials.
The post Crossmint launches Visa powered card payments API for AI agents appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The new API lets AI agents make purchases with eligible Visa cards using tokenized credentials and spending controls, expanding payment options for autonomous software.
The popular fitness-tracking platform, Strava, is restricting access to its API as part of efforts to clamp down on AI scraping, as reported earlier by TechCrunch. Developers who want to build an app using Strava's data now need to pay for a flat $11.99 / month subscription.
In an update on its developer hub, Strava blames the change on "zero-code AI tools" that allow users to quickly create apps that "hammer" APIs. "We have felt this firsthand - developer applications to our program are up 448% year-to-date, API intermediaries have violated policy terms, and scraping attempts have degraded platform performance for everyone," the company wr …
Read the full story at The Verge.
Strava's API changes may hinder innovation and partnerships, impacting its ecosystem and potentially affecting its competitive edge post-IPO.
The post Strava restricts API access, introduces monthly fee ahead of IPO appeared first on Crypto Briefing.