Nvidia, OpenAI and other major artificial intelligence companies all invest in one another. This carries some risks, as Bloomberg’s Joe Weisenthal explains on “The Ezra Klein Show.” Well, that ...
When Oracle Corp. announced a multi-hundred-billion-dollar computing deal with OpenAI last September, its stock jumped 30-40 per cent in a single day. The $330 billion leap in market value was larger ...
Canberra-based global vision-based monitoring technology company Seeing Machines has released its latest Guardian Insights Report, highlighting key trends across the global commercial transport and ...
Think Korean cuisine and the big three come to mind: bibimbap, kimchi and bulgogi. Koreans have grilled bulgogi for centuries, with earlier versions developing into the modern bulgogi style during the ...
In researching his history of tattooing in Utah for his Look Look Tattoo shop and museum — recently relocated to a larger space in Salt Lake City — CJ Fishburn discovered these notables: Fishburn was ...
Ever wondered how to make socks entirely from hand-dyed, handspun yarn? I show you the full process on my knitting machine—spinning the yarn, dyeing it, and finally knitting a pair of socks that are ...
Yeşim Group received the Innovation award in the 2025 Just Style Excellence Awards for its integration of automated, artificial intelligence (AI)-powered inspection technology in circular knitting, ...
Electronic wafers are used as the bases in chips needed for AI. Nvidia said this week that it expects to sell more than $500 billion worth of Blackwell and Rubin chips next year. About the author: ...
AI looks like a circular money machine. Microsoft owns a major stake in OpenAI, which in turn invests in AMD. Nvidia puts billions of dollars into OpenAI and holds equity in CoreWeave, one of ...
The Smashing Machine, featuring Dwayne Johnson’s long-awaited turn as UFC icon Mark Kerr, is the Hollywood star’s potential ticket to the upper echelons of his industry, where thespians and Oscar ...
Tim Berners-Lee may have the smallest fame-to-impact ratio of anyone living. Strangers hardly ever recognize his face; on “Jeopardy!,” his name usually goes for at least sixteen hundred dollars.