A team of former Google employees, led by Hugo Barra, have launched a startup to develop an operating system for AI agents in the same vein as Android.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Wednesday opened London's first Google-funded AI Campus which aims to help young people develop skills in the rapidly developing technology. The centre, based in Camden,
Released on Monday, research commissioned by Google Workspace found that 82% of participants have already been using AI tools at work. Reaching more than 1,000 people, the Harris Poll-conducted survey focused on US workers ages 22-39 who currently have or want to have a leadership position at their employer.
Despite being one of the pioneers of artificial intelligence research, Google (GOOGL) isn’t poised to be a winner of the transformation, according to a business professor.
A new startup created by former Android leaders aims to build an operating system for AI agents. Among them is Hugo Barra, Google’s former VP of Android product management, who says the new company — named “/dev/agents” — will revisit the leaders’ “Android roots.”
In a list of proposals, the U.S. government wants Google to sell off its stakes in AI companies that compete in search, as well as bar the tech giant from new deals and partnerships in the space.
Generative AI (Gen AI) has played an incredibly crucial role in this field. Innovators have developed a strong appetite for the potential with this technology— specifically with regards to transforming workloads, making processes more efficient and even aiding in the drug discovery and development process.
A team of AI researchers at Google DeepMind, working with a team of quantum researchers at Google Quantum AI, announced the development of an AI-based decoder that identifies quantum computing errors.
MatX, a startup designing chips that support large language models, has raised a Series A of approximately $80 million, three sources say, less than a
Google's former CEO Eric Schmidt elaborated on the risks of AI in a Monday episode of The Prof G Pod podcast with NYU professor, entrepreneur and author Scott Galloway. Though Schmidt highlighted that AI improves productivity for nearly everyone,