Google Finance launches Gemini AI tool for fully cited stock answers in minutes
Google Finance just rolled out an AI-driven add-on that seems aimed at traders who need data fast.
AI company news, venture capital funding, startup launches, mergers, acquisitions, and major market moves in the AI industry.
Google Finance just rolled out an AI-driven add-on that seems aimed at traders who need data fast.
People want answers right away. Ask a virtual assistant to write an email or open a spreadsheet and you expect a reply in the blink of an eye, not a pause of a few seconds. That pressure is nudging firms to rethink where AI does its heavy lifting.
When I first saw Sandbar’s new finger-worn ring, I thought it looked more like a sleek accessory than a gadget.
Google rolled out a fresh batch of AI processors this week, and the headline-grabber is the claim of about four times the raw performance of the older TPU generation.
In a few Chinese cities, power utilities have started slashing rates for AI start-ups that agree to run their models on domestically made chips.
When I watched Paytm process a flood of payments, millions in a handful of minutes, I realized the numbers were outgrowing simple software fixes.
At 00:02:44 the podcast kicks off with a quick news flash, and that’s where the timestamps start to matter for anyone tracking AI tools. The show stitches together three shifts that could reshape how devs and firms work with new models.
When I opened my cloud dashboard this week, the latency numbers were already nudging higher and the bill was creeping past the usual ceiling.
I spotted a tiny ring on a colleague’s finger the other day - it looked more like a piece of jewelry than tech. Supposedly it runs AI that can hear you when you speak in a whisper.
When a company tries to roll out an AI assistant, speed often feels like the missing piece. Many firms hit a wall because building an agent can take months, draining cash and killing enthusiasm.
ABB is tightening its 18-year partnership with Tata Consultancy Services, this time to launch an AI-driven IT-operations platform that should make its factories and offices run a bit smoother.
When Kharge rolled out the Rs 600-crore “Deep Tech Decade” on Nov 18, he framed it as a reaction to a talent crunch that now feels global. The numbers are stark: the founder says the world is short of almost 86 million skilled workers.
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