The global AI landscape is currently dominated by trillion-dollar giants and billion-dollar startups focused on achieving Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). Leading names like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind are developing models aimed at broad
Chipmaker Nvidia is investing £2bn to bolster the UK’s artificial intelligence start-up ecosystem. Describing the moment as the “age of AI,” CEO Jensen Huang said the company will target firms including Revolut and Wayve.
The pursuit of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) has long captured attention, with companies like OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Anthropic, and Meta AI pouring billions into human-level intelligence research. Yet alongside this effort, a new category
UK-founded quantum leader Quantinuum, majority-owned by Honeywell, has raised $600 million at a $10 billion valuation. The round brought in new backers including Nvidia’s NVentures, Quanta Computer, and QED, joining existing investors such as
OpenAI Bets Big on Cloud and Chips OpenAI is ramping up infrastructure spending with two landmark agreements: a $300 billion contract with Oracle for cloud services, set to begin in 2027, and a $10
Oracle Rides AI Cloud Wave Despite Earnings Miss Oracle’s stock has almost doubled in 2025, lifted by its $300 billion deal with OpenAI. Even though Q1 FY26 earnings underwhelmed at $14.9 billion revenue and
Artificial Intelligence is reshaping economies and industries on a global scale. Some players have reached trillion-dollar market caps, setting the standard for progress, while billion-dollar disruptors are rapidly redefining their niches. Just behind them,
At its September 9 keynote, Apple unveiled the iPhone Air, the thinnest iPhone in history at just 5.6mm. CEO Tim Cook called the device the “biggest leap ever for iPhone,” representing the first new
At WWDC 2024, Apple unveiled Apple Intelligence, a generative AI platform marketed as “AI for the rest of us.” The technology integrates seamlessly into Apple’s ecosystem, enhancing apps like Mail, Messages, Notes, and Pages
Once defined by hoodies and sneakers, Silicon Valley is now embracing style as part of leadership. From precise tailoring to signature uniforms, leading CEOs use fashion as a means of communicating authority and identity.