Small and energy-efficient models have garnered growing attention in recent months.
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Behind the blinding white light of Monday’s trillion–dollar AI wipeout that was a spot of unabashedly good AI news.
Yesterday saw a huge selloff in US tech stocks after a Chinese AI chatbot app DeepSeek shot to the top of the Apple App Store. Why the fuss?
With less safety regulation and more infrastructure, AI companies are ready to sprint.
Microsoft hasn’t signed off on OpenAI’s dramatic reversal of its onetime plan to become a for-profit venture.
The company’s struggle gives us a glimpse into how the wider world of voice assistants is trying to keep up with the technology zeitgest.
Which way Trump will lean on the issue is difficult to say, though tech companies have worked hard to curry the incoming president’s favor.
Novo Nordisk on Wednesday announced an expanded deal with healthtech firm Valo Health to use AI to fuel drug discovery.
Quarterly earnings at tech giants Meta and Microsoft surged, indicating that multi-billion dollar AI investments are starting to pay off.
Nvidia, the chipmaking king, has announced a slew of consumer-focused hardware, including a $3,000 “personal AI supercomputer” called Digits.
ByteDance, the China-based TikTok owner and political punching bag, is emerging as the nation’s answer to OpenAI.
After making itself an integral part of the supply chain for generative AI, Nvidia is eyeing other futuristic tech bets.
IBM is booting up its domestic production, setting aside $150 billion to make computers in the US over the next five years.
Along with mitigating hallucinations, this tech creates an audit trail for more transparency between the model and its users.
One point Chinese AI companies including Tencent and DeepSeek emphasize about their new models: efficiency.
This new server farm announcement comes just after Apple CEO Tim Cook reportedly paid President Trump a visit.