Quarterly earnings at tech giants Meta and Microsoft surged, indicating that multi-billion dollar AI investments are starting to pay off.
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Intel wants to make AI robots more collaborative and scalable. But it faces steep competition.
Delta Airlines is suing CrowdStrike, which was behind the glitchy software update that sparked a global outage of critical flight systems.
Meta is developing an artificial intelligence-based search engine to stake its claim in a rapidly growing market.
To Google, user search data is the all-important secret sauce that enables it to innovate and outperform rivals.
PayPal wants to make crypto transactions less risky.
It’s hard to place exactly how much responsibility chipmakers have in ensuring that their tech is used the right way.
Shiny new innovations draw in ambitious founders and investors, and then FOMO brings in everyone else, making the eventual fall harder.
Apple shifting production to India is just the latest sign that the world’s most populous nation may be a winner in global trade reordering.
A cloud privacy patent from Amazon highlights the growing movement toward data repatriation, and the tricky situation it presents for cloud…
Tech like this could keep Meta’s models from prompt attack data slips — or at least give it some “thought leadership brownie points.”
AI that only performs well in so-called “high-resource languages” isn’t going to be useful for many people.
IBM is booting up its domestic production, setting aside $150 billion to make computers in the US over the next five years.
Central to the trial is one question: Just who, exactly, are Meta’s competitors? The FTC’s answer may be narrower than you’d expect.
Altera specializes in a type of semiconductor that’s used in a variety of industries including telecom, defense, and robotics.
Fixing the noise problem is key to scaling these devices to more than a few thousand qubits.