Two top researchers from Google’s artificial intelligence lab DeepMind have raised $130 million for a new company with the goal of achieving superintelligence through AI-powered coding agents capable of self-direction.
A growing number of AI research tools help scientists review literature, design experiments and even write papers. Autoscience recently announced that papers authored by its
Moore’s Law was the gold standard for predicting technological progress for years. Introduced by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, in 1965, it stated that the number of transistors on a chip would double every two years,
The trajectory of AI's evolution underscores its potential to transform industries and society, and elevate our daily lives.
There seems to be a new, more impressive AI model every week. Given the rapid pace, how can founders best position themselves to build on top of this
Microsoft is determined to position itself as a leader in the AI industry, and has not been shy about using its vast funds to make that happen. In July 2019, Microsoft invested $1 billion in OpenAI, a decision later revealed to be driven by CEO Satya Nadella’s desire to catch up with the pace of AI development at rival Google.
Doji lets users create AI avatars with their likenesses and virtually try on clothing. It raised funding from Alexis Ohanian's Seven Seven Six fund.
Reflection AI Inc., a new startup led by former Google DeepMind researchers, launched today with $130 million in funding.
Google DeepMind has extended the capabilities of its Articulate Medical Intelligence Explorer (AMIE) beyond diagnosis to support longitudinal disease management. The system is now designed to assist clinicians in monitoring disease progression,
The startup has named AI 'godfathers' Geoff Hinton and Yann LeCun to its advisory board and made a clutch of key hires from Google DeepMind. The company is building AI models to help find new ...
Cheaply built AI abounds as developers riff off Big Tech's costly offerings. But like a dollar store, selection and quality may vary.
Mustafa Suleyman wasn’t getting the answers he wanted. Last fall, during a video call with senior leaders at OpenAI and Microsoft, Suleyman—who leads Microsoft’s in-house artificial intelligence unit—wanted OpenAI staffers to explain how its latest model,