An AI agent is software that takes a goal, breaks it into steps, executes those steps autonomously, and adapts its approach based on results. Unlike chatbots that answer one question
Two hires. One signals where OpenAI’s technology is headed. The other signals where its politics are headed. Both signal IPO. Google paid $2.7 billion to get Noam Shazeer back. That
Amazon Web Services is now exploring selling its homemade AI chips directly to other companies. And if it works, it could be one of the biggest shake-ups in the AI
AI is a practical tool that millions of people use every single day. AI assistants schedule meetings, draft emails, and improve how we work, communicate, and think. You do not
When Sundar Pichai walked up to the podium at Stanford University last weekend, he probably expected applause. What he got instead was a chorus of boos and hundreds of empty
The global market of AI chips and companies that manufacture them sits at roughly $85–95 billion in 2026, expanding at a 25–30% annual growth rate. Every dollar of that growth
AI doesn’t run on ideas alone. It runs on silicon, fiber, data centers, and cloud platforms. Behind every chatbot, recommendation engine, and generative AI tool is a massive, complex infrastructure
Google just sued a Chinese cybercrime group called Outsider Enterprise, and the scale of this scam operation is almost hard to believe. We’re talking millions of victims, billions in stolen
After lots of speculation, SpaceX has gone public and shattered every record in the book. On June 11, 2026, Elon Musk’s space and AI company officially priced its shares at
This week, Anthropic dropped its newest model, Fable, a version of Mythos for the public. Cybersecurity professionals across the internet quickly discovered that Fable’s guardrails are unnecessarily strict. Tasks that