Microsoft is planning on adding internal and third-party artificial intelligence models to power its flagship AI product, Microsoft 365 Copilot. TakeAway Points: Microsoft has been working on adding internal and third-party artificial intelligence models to power its flagship AI product,
Microsoft is reshaping its AI strategy for 365 Copilot by integrating in-house and third-party models, easing its reliance on OpenAI due to cost and speed concerns for enterprise users, according to sources.
Microsoft (MSFT.O) has been working on adding internal and third-party artificial intelligence models to power its flagship AI product Microsoft 365 Copilot, in a bid to diversify from the current underlying technology from OpenAI and reduce costs,
Microsoft is a strong investment opportunity, poised to capitalize on the AI revolution with CEO Satya Nadella's leadership. Read why I rate MSFT a Strong Buy.
Nadella credits his wife with introducing him to the psychologist Carol Dweck's book on developing a growth mindset. He said that he encouraged his people to go from know-it-alls to learn-it-alls. "It's a destination you never reach because the day you say 'I have a growth mindset' means you don't have a growth mindset by definition," he said.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman sought user input for the company's 2025 goals, with top suggestions including enhancements to the Sora video model, improved reasoning models, and family accounts with parental controls.
Perhaps more than any other technology, AI has dominated the headlines this year. For reasons good, bad, fascinating, and possibly a little terrifying. And we wonder: what world-changing advances will happen in 2025?
Elon Musk Cannot Enter Some Buildings Of His Own Aerospace Company SpaceX; The Reason Is… Sam Altman had been openly criticized by the likes of Elon Musk for turning OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, into a for-profit venture.
Forbes found scores of new billionaires this year, in businesses ranging from language apps to humanoid robots to military drones. Here are some of the most notable new three-comma-club members.