Establishing what matters is not enough. Our management columnist explains why effective prioritisation means choosing, communicating and stopping https://t.co/E0K1hSAoL3
Illustration: Paul Blow
Anthropic recently told investors it solved the seemingly equally-intractable arithmetic problem of running an AI company that makes money.
https://t.co/Bmlt7GrdUp
Public pensions weigh more on government budgets with every passing year. What if Europe used its pension savings to boost markets and finance entrepreneurs with long-term capital? https://t.co/pHhqA4AcdQ
Since an American media company took the wheel, the plan has been to bring razzmatazz to an untapped younger audience, in order to set Formula One up for future growth https://t.co/WL4acFmAIN
Liftoff.
The Artemis II mission launched from @NASAKennedy at 6:35pm ET (2235 UTC), propelling four astronauts on a journey around the Moon.
Artemis II will pave the way for future Moon landings, as well as the next giant leap — astronauts on Mars.
It remains unclear how long China’s car market will remain stalled for. But it is yet another reminder to the world that what happens in the country steers the auto industry everywhere https://t.co/l9SqyLuKEL
In theory, the EU’s economic policy is meant to fuse 27 national markets into one pool of 450m consumers. In practice, it has failed to keep up with the modern world. Could that be about to change? https://t.co/cnJrtEvCmV
The prospect of harnessing “physical AI” to revolutionise manufacturing has generated much excitement. We explain what the factory of the future might look like https://t.co/8c7XJGIUBd
Among listed American firms from 1925 to 2023, most have negative returns. Less than 3% of stocks account for all the increase in shareholder wealth in that time.
https://t.co/0Ni4IWkOyi
A hit product can bring a company to the attention of millions. But lasting success comes from a business model that is difficult to replicate, and which keeps evolving in a fast-changing world https://t.co/RmgMtcmEKg
From the Bloomberg article on how “Oracle Corp., the once stodgy database giant that’s borrowed tens of billions and tethered its fortunes to the artificial intelligence boom, is quickly emerging as the credit market’s barometer for AI risk” and how it’s CDS (chart below) has become “the market’s preferred way to hedge — and bet against — the AI boom.”
#economy #ai #markets @Oracle
OpenAI scrambles to find new revenue in its 5-year business plan. It’s exploring “creative” ideas to secure more capital, to spend more than $1 trillion on a flurry of enormous (and confusing) deals.
@chartrdaily
https://t.co/TVTSa9rZwR
AI-generated content is flooding the internet, from videos and music to news and books. On top of that, generative AI is making false information look more convincing than ever. We're entering a new era of information overload, and figuring out what's real and what's not is becoming a real challenge.
Watch our latest video to find out how AI slop affects the internet and why kurzgesagt videos will always remain human-made: https://t.co/7VuzSD1HkS
The most pressing set of questions for financial analysts concerns the tech giants’ assets—specifically, the longevity of all those fancy AI chips they are installing in their data centres https://t.co/NrQaM2eelc