X.AI, founded by Elon Musk, is now joining the generative artificial intelligence (AI) race, challenging OpenAI. With Musk's team wooing investors and with Twitter-owner Jack Dorsey as a director, they are determined to create a platform focused on helping people achieve their goals faster and smarter with AI, machine learning, and natural language processing. Keep an eye on this Silicon Valley race as X.AI gives OpenAI and its chatbot ChatGPT a run for their money.
Elon Musk, the billionaire tech mogul, has recently revealed a venture to build an AI product to challenge the likes of ChatGPT and Dall-E Creator. X.AI, Musk's spin-off project in Nevada, is dedicated to building an AI product that redefines the market and concepts of advanced artificial intelligence and neural networks. Musk has also founded X Corp—a limited liability firm to bring together AI, machine learning, and big data technologies to create unbeatable digital products and services. Experience all the possibilities of AI with the launch of Musk's X.AI!
Elon Musk, entrepreneur, investor, and founder of Tesla, SpaceX, The Boring Company, and OpenAI, is looking to create a new AI firm. He has recently pulled away from OpenAI due to issues with progress, direction and control, and is now recruiting a team of researchers and engineers to compete with OpenAI. The firm is expected to be equipped with thousands of NVIDIA GPU processors. This follows Amazon's entrance into the generative AI space with Musk voicing his concerns about the potential dangers of AI while simultaneously supporting an open letter concerning the halt of AI models.
. Elon Musk, tech-industry icon, is preparing a venture to challenge OpenAI with a new Artificial Intelligence project. Sources close to the project told Financial Times Musk has already recruited a team of AI researchers & engineers and purchased Nvidia's GPUs. Investor reactions remain positive with the formation of Musk's latest technological venture.
This week we explored how financial institutions are responding to ever-changing markets across the world. Bank of England is looking into protecting savers better, TSB's former head of IT was presented with regulation fines and Skipton Building Society created a new deposit-free mortgage option. Tupperware struggled as a result of their own success and Tesco saw a drastic drop in profits due to food inflation. Elon Musk's dream of transforming Twitter into an 'everything app' has not gone as smoothly and put him in the headlines again. Finally, a pair of Michael Jordan's signed shoes sold for $2.2 million.
Explore the evolution of tech policy from Obama's optimism to Harris's vision at the Democratic National Convention. What's next for Democrats in tech?