Discover how Indian tech giants Zoho, Tech Mahindra, and Tata Consultancy Services are developing generative AI platforms to rival ChatGPT by Sam Altman. Will they succeed?
From TCS to Tech Mahindra, IT companies in India are investing in generative AI tech to gain competitive advantage and automate tasks as humans would. These firms are also partnering with top players such as Microsoft, Google and OpenAI to customise enterprise-level use cases, though talent scarcity and privacy issues are challenges.
Lord Dominic Johnson, UK's Minister for Investment arrives in India to further strengthen the trade, technology and science ties between the UK and India - visit Infosys and Zensar to explore investment in the UK. The Global Investment Summit 2023 promises 200 CEOs from multinational companies and investors to gathering to promote UK business & investment.
Lord Jo Johnson, UK Investment Minister, is visiting India to further strengthen the investment partnership between the two countries and pave the way for a free trade agreement. By meeting potential investors, including Infosys and Zensar, Johnson seeks to promote the UK as Europe's "number one investment destination" and attract Global Investment Summit 2023. With £28bn investments and over 500,000 jobs supported by both countries, this visit offers an opportunity to rewrite the story of UK-India relations.
The world was introduced to OpenAI's revolutionary invention, ChatGPT: an AI chatbot used to compose poetry, write essays and even come up with content ideas. Despite the introduction of the more refined GPT-4, doubts and worries remain over whether AI chatbots will replace human workers. NR Narayana Murthy, billionaire founder of Infosys and ranking among 'most powerful people' (in 2005), believes this will never be the case. Humans, he argues, possess a power and flexibility unmatched by any artificial intelligence. AIMA's 67th Foundation Day saw Murthy further emphasise this sentiment, standing firm in the conviction that AI and machines will never replace people.