Articles
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1 week ago |
businessinsider.nl | Lloyd Lee |Alistair Barr |Dan DeFrancesco |Grace Lett
Welcome back to our Sunday edition, where we round up some of our top stories and take you inside our newsroom. This week, BI's Polly Thompson took an inside look at how artificial intelligence is set to upend a pillar of the white-collar world: the Big Four. On the agenda today: But first: Tesla's robotaxis are taking the wheel. If this was forwarded to you, sign up here. Download Business Insider's app Tesla's big betI remain in awe of self-driving cars.
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2 weeks ago |
businessinsider.com | Lauren Steussy |Lloyd Lee |Henry Blodget
Luke Nichols, the creator behind the popular YouTube channel, Outdoor Boys, is saying farewell to the nearly 15 million followers he's garnered by posting videos of himself camping in desolate conditions. The father of three said in a five-minute video published Saturday titled "Goodbye" that he's going to stop making content "for a little while" to spend more time with his family.
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3 weeks ago |
yahoo.com | Lloyd Lee |Alistair Barr
Waymo's robotaxis have been providing fully autonomous rides to the SF public since 2024. Tesla is gearing up to launch a robotaxi service in Austin, using its Full-Self Driving software. Tesla's FSD is good, but it made one mistake we just can't overlook. The robotaxi race is speeding up. Tesla is preparing to debut its autonomous ride-hailing service in Austin next month, and Alphabet's Waymo continues to expand throughout major US cities.
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3 weeks ago |
yahoo.com | Lloyd Lee |Katherine Tangalakis-Lippert
Sam Altman asked Grok if he or Elon Musk should advance AI if the fate of humanity was at stake. We asked the same question to ChatGPT, Claude, CoPilot, Gemini, Meta AI, and Perplexity. Altman went 6-1 over Musk. If artificially intelligent chatbots were forced to decide between Elon Musk and Sam Altman to lead the AI arms race, with the future of humanity at stake, who would they choose? The OpenAI CEO proposed that very question to Grok on Friday. AdvertisementAdvertisementHe lost.
Nvidia stock slides premarket after warning of $5.5 billion hit from Trump's China chip restrictions
1 month ago |
yahoo.com | Lloyd Lee |Shubhangi Goel
Nvidia said it expected a charge of up to $5.5 billion due to restrictions on selling H20 chips to China. The chip giant was 5.8% lower in premarket trading, while the Nasdaq was set to open lower. The Trump Administration is eyeing tariffs on chips as a way to encourage more US manufacturing.
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