The inside is a sad sight with month-old Thanksgiving leftovers, a carton of eggs, soda, condiments, a tub of Greek yogurt, and a big jug of maple syrup. Meta-AI-as-John-Cena replies that I can make a “variety of breakfast dishes,” such as “scrambled eggs, omelets, or yogurt parfaits.”
Meta's chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, says DeepSeek's success with R1 says more about the value of open source than Chinese competition.
The company plans to spend up to $65 billion on infrastructure for AI in 2025, and is planning a data center with a footprint almost as large as Manhattan.
Key Takeaways Meta Platforms plans to invest $60 billion to $65 billion in capital expenditures this year as the tech giant expands its artificial intelligence efforts, CEO Mark Zuckerberg posted on Facebook Friday.
Meta’s artificial intelligence bots across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp were still telling inquisitive users that the US president is Joe Biden – despite Donald Trump’s
The company intends to use the funds to build a data center “so large that it would cover a significant part of Manhattan,” Zuckerberg said in a Facebook post.
Apple AR glasses, smart glasses, and AirPods with cameras have to happen because Apple has to extend AI beyond the iPhone.
AI frameworks, including Meta’s Llama, are prone to automatic Python deserialization by pickle that could lead to remote code execution.
US tech stocks faced a significant blow on Monday after Chinese AI startup DeepSeek challenged America’s dominance in the industry.
A sharp selloff rattled AI and semiconductor stocks globally on January 27 with AI major Nvidia falling as much as 10 per cent. The selloff was triggered by fears of rising competition from Chinese AI start-up DeepSeek, which claims to deliver advanced AI models using less sophisticated, cost-efficient chips.
The Chinese startup behind the AI service is offering users its most advanced models completely free of charge