Imagine a world where artificial intelligence churns out texts and images at an unprecedented scale, yet a leading expert questions whether this technological marvel is just a wasteful gimmick. On December 3, via a post on X, Timnit Gebru, a renowned figure in AI ethics, spotlighted the work of
Imagine a world where the tiny chips powering everything from smartphones to supercomputers are designed not in weeks or months, but in mere hours, with pinpoint accuracy that rivals the best human expertise. This isn’t a distant dream—it’s the reality Vinci, a Palo Alto-based tech company, is
Imagine a world where robots, soft and flexible as a human hand, assist surgeons in delicate operations or care for the elderly with a gentle touch, seamlessly blending into human environments without posing a threat. This vision, once a distant dream, is edging closer to reality thanks to
Dustin Trainor sits down with Laurent Giraid, a technologist steeped in AI systems, machine learning, and the ethics that keep them safe and useful at scale. With MCP crossing its first year and surging to nearly two thousand servers, the conversation spans the hard edges of taking agentic systems
A sharper way to ask the hard question What if the leap in robot reliability came not from ever-larger models but from a smarter split between thinking and doing that keeps language plans on a short leash and loops real-world feedback back into every choice the machine makes? The premise is blunt:
Setting the Stage for AI Transformation Imagine a world where enterprises can harness the full potential of artificial intelligence without grappling with insurmountable technical barriers. At SC25, Dell Technologies and NVIDIA have turned this vision into reality, unveiling groundbreaking