IBM is booting up its domestic production, setting aside $150 billion to make computers in the US over the next five years.
Our daily email brings you smart and engaging news and analysis on the biggest stories in business and finance. For free.
The EU wants everyone to know it has no intention of genuflecting toward a new Trump administration and won’t stop doling out Big Tech fines.
After a brief blackout period from late Saturday, TikTok began restoring services to US users on Sunday morning.
Blue Origin is going slower than SpaceX, but it also nailed a massive rocket launch on the first try. Jeff Bezos is back in the space race.
Back in 2020, Google’s huge market share of the internet search market hovered at about 92% by most metrics
The chip giant’s patent history signals its ideas for the future of the data center.
The company’s struggle gives us a glimpse into how the wider world of voice assistants is trying to keep up with the technology zeitgest.
It’s the latest in several moves — announced in swift succession — that suggest a radical overhaul in Zuckerberg’s thinking about Meta.
The new venture, dubbed Twenty One, will go public via a Cantor-owned special purpose acquisition company (SPAC).
Which way Trump will lean on the issue is difficult to say, though tech companies have worked hard to curry the incoming president’s favor.
Novo Nordisk on Wednesday announced an expanded deal with healthtech firm Valo Health to use AI to fuel drug discovery.
According to the Financial Times, Apple is ramping up its Apple News division. But can it fix its irritating AI hallucinations?
A half dozen humanoid robots completed a half marathon in Beijing, though their prowess still trails human runners by a considerable amount.
So far this year, investors have greatly gold compared bitcoin. So if it’s not digital gold, what is bitcoin exactly?
Amazon’s head AGI scientist told TechCrunch that Nova Sonic is top-of-class when it comes to conversational flow.
Elon Musk’s departure from the Department of Government Efficiency still remains something of an “if,” not a “when.”