Though chatbots do code’s heavy lifting, humans need to be in charge.
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The adage “go big or go home” may not always apply to AI.
Quantum computing is potentially revolutionary technology that could, among other things, end classical computing as we know it.
The transaction would create the world’s largest advertising agency — that is, if you don’t count Big Tech players like Google and Amazon.
Big Tech and startups alike are making strides in the race to supplant classical computers, but a few roadblocks remain.
Finding ways to efficiently keep server farms cool benefits more than just Google’s cloud services business.
Despite its initial fumble with Google Glass, there are a few reasons it may be able to avoid another “glassholes” situation.
The Trump White House may usher in a big loosening of the rules around cars that can operate without human drivers.
Amazon wants to reduce its reliance on Nvidia and offer an alternative to Nvidia for Amazon Web Services clients in the process.
Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced the government plans to introduce a law banning children from social media.
Google could help cool down quantum computers while they work with classical ones.
Meta is developing an artificial intelligence-based search engine to stake its claim in a rapidly growing market.
Google is revamping its shopping service into a more Instagram-slash-TikTok-esque feed, showing users an infinite scroll of products.
Tons of companies are racing to build an AI video generation engine that actually works.
Epic Games filed a lawsuit against Google and Samsung, pulling the South Korean electronics giant into its long-running beef with Google.
It’s not a hallucination: Artificial intelligence companies have actually managed to placate at least one national regulator.