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Why Wall Street thinks US memory maker Micron is the next Nvidia - TechCrunch

1 oră în urmă
57 secunde min
Cristina Preda
Micron, the Boise, Idaho-based memory chip maker, has captured Wall Street’s heart. Whether the love affair endures will heavily depend on how long the AI-driven supply crunch for memory chips lasts. Micron promises that it has shored up its position for the long term, which would allow it to withstand a sudden drop in demand or overcapacity of supply. And Wall Street has become a believer, helping Micron briefly surpass the market valuation of Meta and Tesla for the first time on Thursday, though it floated back down by Friday to nearly match them.
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Economie

Towards autonomous medical artificial intelligence agents - Nature

Nature (2026) Cite this article Large language models (LLMs) show great potential for clinical decision-making, yet most applications remain narrow, task-specific chat tools rather than systems integrated into clinical workflows1,2. However, building physician copilots will require models that operate within the electronic health record (EHR), with governed access to patient data and the ability to initiate permitted EHR actions within defined safety constraints.

Economie

Working From Home Has a Grim Effect on Your Brain, Surprise Research Finds - Futurism

Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech Most people would kill for a work-from-home job, but it turns out it can have some grim effects on your mental health. A new study published in the journal Science found that remote workers were more likely to report feeling anxious, depressed, and being socially isolated compared to people who worked in-office.

Economie

Anthropic's Amodei suggests universal basic income could offset 'intrinsic' AI-related job losses - Business Insider

Dario Amodei says he's not trying to be a "prophet of doom" about AI and jobs, but the Anthropic CEO is warning that mass displacement may not be a temporary growing pain of the technology — it may be part of what makes AI work. In a new policy essay, Amodei wrote that there is a "decent possibility" that, despite efforts to soften the blow, AI could cause "significant enduring job loss" — and that this "may be an intrinsic property of the technology and the way it broadly replicates human cognition." The argument reframes one of the AI industry's most uncomfortable questions.

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