Spotify is adding fitness as its next major category, launching workout videos, playlists, and Peloton classes inside the app for free and Premium users.
On the latest episode of Equity, we discuss how Apple has changed since Cook became CEO in 2011, and what challenges incoming CEO John Ternus will be facing.
In a recent experiment, Anthropic created a classified marketplace where AI agents represented both buyers and sellers, striking real deals for real goods and real money.
In a letter to the residents of Tumbler Ridge, Canada, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said he is βdeeply sorryβ that his company failed to alert law enforcement about the suspect in a recent mass shooting.
Nuclear startup X-energy went public, geothermal startup Fervo is about to. Could this be the moment that climate tech investors have been waiting for?
Canadian AI startup Cohere is taking over Germany-based Aleph Alpha with support from Lidlβs owner, Schwarz Group. With the blessing of their governments, the companies intend to offer a sovereign alternative to enterprises in an AI landscape dominated by American players.
SusHi Tech Tokyo 2026 has four tightly defined technology domains, each backed by live demonstrations, dedicated exhibit floors, and sessions featuring the people actually building and funding these technologies globally.
It's hard to break the cycle of doomscrolling, but there are plenty of apps that can help you spend more time on content thatβs engaging and productive.
Cohere, the Canada-based AI company that makes AI tools for businesses in regulated industries, announced Friday it would merge with Aleph Alpha, a German company that also builds AI systems for businesses and governments.Β
Google plans up to $40B investment in Anthropic as AI rivals race to secure massive compute capacity, following the limited release of its powerful, cybersecurity-focused Mythos model.
Appleβs sold-out Mac mini is spawning marked-up eBay listings as demand surges for the compact desktop, now favored for running local AI models and tools.
Researchers have found a new case where government authorities used a fake Android app to plant spyware on a targetβs phone. The company that allegedly developed the spyware was not previously known to sell this type of software.