Microsoft has once again pushed the boundaries of technology. This time it's not another Surface device, but Windows 365 Link, a mini PC for the 349 $ that, instead of being the "brains of the operation," simply connects your monitors and peripherals to the cloud. It is a so-called "thin client," which serves as a window into the world of your virtual computer in the cloud. Welcome to the future of work and digital offices.
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Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google, has seen the company swing from a $100 million startup to a $180 billion global powerhouse. He recently revealed some lesser-known secrets about how Google succeeded, from the bold 70-20-10 policy to the "fail fast" philosophy and insights into the future of artificial intelligence. Here are some of his unusual strategies that are more relevant today than ever before.
Volkswagen, once a symbol of the German auto industry, is struggling to keep pace with the global market today, mainly due to failures in electric vehicles (EVs) and declining sales in the key Chinese market. The company, which includes brands such as Audi, Porsche and Skoda, has been facing financial challenges that have forced it to take dramatic cost-cutting measures.
Smarter Siri, imaging tools, and enhanced text understanding—Apple Intelligence delivers revolutionary features that promise to redefine your experience with Apple devices.
Tesla presented its latest revolution – Robovan, an autonomous electric vehicle that changes the rules of the game in urban transport. At the unveiling in Los Angeles, Elon Musk announced that the Robovan will drive without a driver, transport up to 20 people and shape the future of urban traffic flows.
The Oura Ring 4 is the latest version of the popular smart ring, offering advanced health and wellness monitoring in an even thinner, more comfortable form factor. Oura boasts completely renewed sensors, advanced Smart Sensing technology and a longer battery life that provides up to eight days of use on a single charge.
A revolution is taking place in the fitness world! GYM24 introduced the first digital trainer - GYM24 AI trainer - in Slovenia, which is based on artificial intelligence. This virtual personal trainer not only helps with exercise and nutritional advice, but does it with a touch of humor that will make you love exercise even more.
Artificial intelligence has gone from hibernation to an explosion of innovation, from playing chess to creating 3D worlds. What's the next big breakthrough? Spatial intelligence, a technology that not only understands images, but also perceives, generates and acts in three-dimensional space. And this can be more disruptive than the language models we have become so accustomed to.
Artificial intelligence already surpasses human abilities in many areas. But the future that awaits us is not only a technical upgrade – AI will bring a revolution in our jobs, society and way of life. How we as humanity react to this technological breakthrough will determine whether AI will usher us into a world of abundance or chaos.
BMW is known for introducing innovative technologies into its production processes, but this time it is something completely new. For the first time, they tested the use of a humanoid robot called Figure 02, developed by the California company Figure. At BMW's plant in Spartanburg, USA, it was tested for several weeks under real production conditions, where it successfully inserted sheet metal parts into special fixing points – a task that requires a high degree of skill.
In the weeks leading up to the release of OpenAI's latest "inference" model, called ChatGPT o1, independent AI security research firm Apollo ran into an interesting problem. They found that the model was producing false results in a new way. Or to put it another way, the model lied. Yes, AI is now lying to our faces.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is gradually taking over tasks that we once thought only humans could do. What does this mean for the future of work? Will AI liberate us or rob us of our meaning? And how can we prepare for a world where work may no longer be a central part of our lives?