San Francisco’s Hot Tourist Attraction: Driverless Cars 22-05-2024
Cable cars are still trundling up the city’s hills, but robotaxis from Waymo are shaping up as the city’s latest must-do for visitors.Lees verder op New York Times
Cable cars are still trundling up the city’s hills, but robotaxis from Waymo are shaping up as the city’s latest must-do for visitors.Lees verder op New York Times
Ms. Shanahan, a lawyer who was married to Sergey Brin, a Google founder, led a rarefied and sometimes turbulent life in Silicon Valley, according to a Times examination.Lees verder op New York Times
Cable cars are still trundling up the city’s hills, but the driverless cars from Waymo are shaping up as San Francisco’s latest tourist attraction.Lees verder op New York Times
It cost $18,000 when it was introduced in 1965, but it bridged the world between room-size mainframes and the modern desktop.Lees verder op New York Times
It cost $18,000 when it was introduced in 1965, but it bridged the world between room-size mainframes and the modern desktop.Lees verder op New York Times
Mr. Trump has treated Trump Media, which runs his social network Truth Social, as a low-cost sideshow. Now a big portion of his wealth hinges on its success.Lees verder op New York Times
Researchers at the A.I. company Anthropic claim to have found clues about the inner workings of large language models, possibly helping to prevent their misuse and to curb their potential threats.Lees verder op New York Times
For years, Craig Steven Wright, an Australian cryptocurrency enthusiast, claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious creator of Bitcoin. Then the courts got involved.Lees verder op New York Times
Researchers at the A.I. company Anthropic claim to have found clues about the inner workings of large language models, possibly helping to prevent their misuse and to curb their potential threats.Lees verder op New York Times
Microsoft, HP, Dell and others unveiled a new kind of laptop tailored to work with artificial intelligence. Analysts expect Apple to do something similar.Lees verder op New York Times