the Power of Computing for Millions
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Cleve Moler, Who Unlocked the Power of Computing for Millions, Dies at 86
He built interfaces that allowed engineers, scientists and everyday people to solve difficult problems without having to write the underlying code.
Cleve Moler, Who Unlocked the Power of Computing for Millions, Dies at 86
He built interfaces that allowed engineers, scientists and everyday people to solve difficult problems without having to write the underlying code.
Google to buy computing from Spacex at $920 million per month; filing shows 90 days notice period
Google has agreed to pay Elon Musk's Spacex $920 million a month for computing power as part of a cloud-services deal. According to a Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) filing by Spacex, the deal runs through mid-2029. As per the agreement, Google will pay Spacex the monthly fee from October through June 2029, with capacity ramping up through September at a reduced cost.
Google will pay SpaceX $920 million a month to use xAI's data centers
Google will pay SpaceX $920 million a month to use xAI's data centers The company needs extra computing power for Gemini Enterprise. Google has just signed a $30 billion AI deal with SpaceX, which owns Elon Musk's xAI. According to a SpaceX filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, it will receive $920 million a month from Google in exchange for computing power from xAI's data centers, starting in October this year until June 2029.
Google rents SpaceX/AI supercomputers for $920M a month, ahead of IPO
Google has signed a $30 billion deal to lease computing power from SpaceX, paying $920 million per month through June 2029. The move came after SpaceX acquired xAI in February 2026, gaining massive data centres. The deal precedes SpaceX’s highly anticipated IPO next week.
AI to rescue Australian wildlife research drowning in data
AI to rescue Australian wildlife research drowning in data Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor The power of AI has been harnessed to rapidly clear a photography bottleneck and bring greater coordination and computing power to efforts to save Australian animals from extinction. Developed by researchers at The University of Queensland, the Wildlife Observatory of Australia (WildObs) can quickly analyze millions of images taken by hidden wildlife cameras, meaning faster, more...
Quantum circuits help AI overcome memory limitations with minimal new parameters
June 7, 2026 report Quantum circuits help AI overcome memory limitations with minimal new parameters Sam Jarman Author Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For millions of people, chatbots powered by large language models (LLMs) are now a key feature of everyday life. These AI systems are growing at a rapid pace, but scaling them up is becoming increasingly costly and resource-intensive. Through a new preprint on the arXiv server, a team led by Borja Aizpurua at...
Why Thermodynamics Rules Future Orbital Data Centers
Why Orbital Data Centers Are Harder Than Silicon Valley Thinks Shedding heat will require ingenious new designs “Space computing, the final frontier, has arrived,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang declared at the Nvidia GTC conference in March. Indeed, the idea of data centers in orbit has gone from science fiction to a serious spending category. Elon Musk’s SpaceX has acquired xAI (also Musk’s) and is planning a constellation of space-based data centers.
Quantum Computing Is Having Its Public Market Moment
Quantinuum lost nearly $200 million last year, saw revenue drop the first quarter of 2026, and says its technology may never work–yet investors are clamoring to buy the stock. The quantum computer maker boosted the price and number of shares it will issue on the New York Stock Exchange ahead of its public debut on Thursday, indicating higher-than-anticipated demand. Quantum computers are a nascent technology that promise to solve problems current machines can’t, unlocking commercial...
Jef Raskin, the Visionary Behind the Mac (2013)
Jef Raskin founded the Macintosh project at Apple, which led to the development of the Apple Mac and the popularisation of the graphical user-interface. He was Apple employee #31 and left the Macintosh team in mid-1981 after Steve Jobs took over the project. Jason Walsh: Before the Mac you were a professor of music.