On The Vergecast: AI chips, AI apps, the re-Pebble, and more.
DeepSeek shocked the world with its new AI offering, which it developed for $5 million, contrasting sharply with the billions that OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google spent developing theirs. Result: a $1 trillion bloodbath on Wall Street and an assumption-assaulting moment heard worldwide.
After the Chinese startup DeepSeek shook Silicon Valley and Wall Street, efforts have begun to reproduce its cost-efficient AI in the West.
Our world runs on computer chips. From the chips that run new cars to the chips that help your phones and computers process information to the microchips that help track lost anim
HubSpot cofounder Dharmesh Shah is betting that artificial intelligence advances will go far beyond the basic question-and-answer functions of ChatGPT or DeepSeek.
The Chinese firm has pulled back the curtain to expose how the top labs may be building their next-generation models. Now things get interesting.
We have a breakthrough new player on the artificial intelligence field: DeepSeek is an AI assistant developed by a Chinese company called DeepSeek. Thanks to social media, DeepSeek has been breaking the internet for the last few days.
While generative AI (GenAI) and other AI technologies have immense potential, businesses must look beyond conventional metrics to understand their true ROI.
A security report shows that DeepSeek R1 can generate more harmful content than other AI models without any jailbreaks.
With DeepSeek shaking up the AI world, SFGATE columnist Drew Magary asked its competitors a bunch of dumb questions, and got very dumb answers.
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These tech giants recognize that the next generation of microprocessors to be used for AI calculations at data centers will require oodles of electricity to power and cool them. A single Nvidia Blackwell chip,