Scarce, high-performance GPUs have defined the pace of AI progress, and firms without access have watched prototypes stall while competitors raced ahead on better hardware and deeper pockets. South Korea answered that gap with a national allocation that redirected state-purchased accelerators to
Power decisions that once required night-long simulations now had to be made between scheduler heartbeats as AI clusters pushed against power limits and procurement cycles, turning energy from a back-office metric into a gating factor for throughput. As data centers edged toward consuming a
Boardrooms juggling cloud commitments, AI roadmaps, and compliance checklists just saw the ground shift as Microsoft and OpenAI replaced a once-exclusive alliance with a time-bounded, non-exclusive pact that lets OpenAI run natively on rival clouds while Microsoft keeps licensed access through
Signals moved through social feeds faster than media plans could catch them, and budget owners increasingly demanded creator programs that turned cultural spark into accountable sales within days, not quarters. Against this backdrop, RAD Amplify, the audience intelligence and creator marketing arm
A teller at a Kumasi branch texts a customer in Asante Twi, a reporter in Ho records an Ewe interview, and a fintech in Accra checks onboarding documents while a voice bot greets callers in Ga—each task looks routine until an AI system drops a tone mark, misreads a dialect, or invents a phrase that
Venture capital chases models, hyperscalers race to wire new regions, and power grids strain as training clusters swell—all while AI infrastructure spending tracks toward more than $200 billion by 2027, turning data center silicon into the market’s most contested profit pool. That surge did not