NVIDIA stories
The test could ease factory labour shortages by proving humanoid robots can handle repetitive logistics work alongside staff in live production settings.
The award may help Conflow win more deals for its solar iLamp units, which it says can fund themselves while running AI locally.
Buyers in Australia and New Zealand will get a year of Surfshark One on selected Gigabyte notebooks, adding security value worth more than AUD $170.
The benchmark win could help enterprises compare AI cloud performance more clearly as demand grows for reliable large-scale model training.
The test could show whether space systems can swap value directly in orbit, reducing reliance on ground stations for future satellite networks.
It aims to cut latency and simplify operations for regulated AI deployments, while adding tighter security and storage controls.
The move could help chipmakers catch design flaws earlier as AI processors grow more complex and costly to fix after fabrication.
More than 40 critical software groups will use Claude Mythos Preview to hunt flaws, as Anthropic commits USD $100 million in credits.
Defenders may gain faster vulnerability discovery, but the same AI leap is also sharpening concerns that attackers will exploit flaws in minutes.
Geopolitical risk is clouding Gulf AI investment, after Iran named OpenAI’s Stargate campus in Abu Dhabi as a possible target.
The funding would help Firmus expand AI factories across Asia-Pacific, as demand for compute outpaces available capacity and power supply.
AI infrastructure operators can now bill by usage rather than GPU rental as Rafay adds token metering and access controls to its platform.
Investor appetite for AI remains intense as OpenAI's new cash haul lifts its valuation to USD $852 billion and deepens its compute push.
Sensitive prompts and documents will stay out of model training as ExpressVPN enters AI software with an enclave-based service for Pro subscribers.
Businesses are under pressure to prove returns on existing tech spend, prompting EY New Zealand to bolster its AI and SAP leadership.
Backed by a16z Speedrun, the start-up aims to ease AI's power crunch by proving servers can run continuously in orbit from 2027.
It could bolster domestic AI capacity and data sovereignty as Montreal-based Ciara begins building NVIDIA-certified systems for Canadian customers.
The pact secures 3.5 gigawatts of next-generation chip capacity from 2027 as enterprise demand for Claude surges past USD $30 billion a year.
The funding will help Qodo expand globally as enterprises look for ways to verify AI-written code before it reaches production systems.
The move gives Toronto AI startups access to senior academic and industry advice as they push research ideas towards commercial products.