Kevin Weil talks about why OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle are planning a massive investment in A.I. infrastructure in the U.S. Weil spoke with WSJ’s Joanna Stern at Journal House in Davos.
OpenAI's new Operator tool promises to handle some tasks like a human would. Here's how businesses could use it to save time.
OpenAI, as you likely know, is one of tech’s biggest unicorns. A group of entrepreneurs and researchers, including Elon Musk and the company’s current CEO Sam Altman, founded the artificial intelligence company in 2015.
Allurion stock soars on weight-loss therapy update. Stardust Power breaks ground on Oklahoma lithium refinery. OpenAI launches shopping agent Operator; Etsy, eBay tick higher.
A Chinese artificial-intelligence company has Silicon Valley raving, calling it "amazing and impressive,"despite working with less-advanced chips.
Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) is a mega-cap stock that I think doesn’t get as much credit as it should. This company has basically kickstarted the AI wave with its early investments into OpenAI. Not only that,
GE Aerospace posts strong Q3 results, announces $7B stock buyback; shares soar. American Airlines expects a significant Q4 loss; EA cuts 2025 net bookings guidance.
Pressure is piling on the European Union to cut back its sustainability agenda, Wall Street may thwart President Donald Trump’s call for a new oil boom, and the US president unleashes retaliatory tariffs against Colombia. Plus, Microsoft’s stake in OpenAI is complicating the start-up’s path to become a for-profit company.
At WSJ Journal House Davos, OpenAI Chief Product Officer Kevin Weil outlines ChatGPT’s 2025 roadmap—including a new model and AI agent features that can take actions on your behalf—while predicting the future of computing power,
China proved that it has AI capabilities like those of U.S. industry leaders, and without wide access to the world’s most powerful AI chips.