@isiosstable Yes and I saw a post earlier that said if the new siri isn’t available on the first dev beta then apple isn’t really serious about this new Siri. What do you think?
@D0nMaurici0@wariocolosseum Yes, but my point is that no “money” is going to anyone’s pocket or bank account. A stock wipeout is just lowering the perceived value of the persons or companies.
You ruin it by calling this simp behaviour.
We call this AFFECTION.
A simp is a man who goes all out for a woman who doesn’t reciprocate his efforts—don’t mix those definitions up.
If the new Siri is still absent in iOS 27 Beta 1, I will lose all hope in Apple’s AI strategy.
They’ve had 2 years since WWDC24 where they showed off features that didn’t work.
Google has more AI computing power than almost anyone on Earth. This week it agreed to pay SpaceX nearly a billion dollars a month to rent more.
The exact figure is $920 million a month, from October 2026 through June 2029. For that, Google gets to use about 110,000 NVIDIA chips, the kind nearly every AI company is racing to get its hands on. Over the life of the deal, that comes to about $30 billion.
Google already runs some of the biggest data centers on the planet, the warehouse-sized buildings packed with computers that run AI. The reason it is renting from SpaceX comes down to timing. Google's AI assistant for businesses, Gemini, is catching on faster than the company expected, and it wants extra computing power fast while it builds more of its own. Google called the SpaceX deal a short-term bridge. Its parent company, Alphabet, is still spending more than $180 billion this year on data centers of its own.
The chips SpaceX is renting out come from a set of data centers called Colossus, built by xAI, Elon Musk's AI company, which he folded into SpaceX earlier this year. SpaceX now rents that computing power by the month, and Google isn't even its biggest customer.
Anthropic, the company behind the Claude chatbot, agreed in May to pay SpaceX $1.25 billion a month through 2029, about $15 billion a year, for a full Colossus site near Memphis. Google's deal is for roughly half that much computing power.
Put the two together and SpaceX has signed more than $70 billion in deals just to rent out AI computing. The whole company, from its rockets to its Starlink internet service, brought in about $18.7 billion last year. So in a matter of weeks SpaceX has lined up AI rental income worth almost four years of everything else it does. And it did it right before going public on June 12, in what is set to be the largest stock market debut in history, valued near $1.75 trillion.
@theo Well, they laced every single product of theirs with AI at io so yeah, they’re gonna need a whole lot of pointless compute that wasn’t required to do the basic things we could do well without this fucking AI integration!!