Artificial Intelligence | News, analysis, features, how-tos, and videos
From unfettered control over enterprise systems to glitches that go unnoticed, LLM deployments can go wrong in subtle but serious ways.
When the ship that is Apple moves in any direction, you can always count on careless whispers to expose the destination. From research labs to sophisticated AI models and Apple Silicon for server farms, here's what we've learned in just one
While most of Capgemini's clients are reticent to use AI-generated code in production, the technology has led to big efficiency and productivity increases that developers and engineers might not yet realize, says Jiani Zhang, the company's
Georgia Tech partnered with Nvidia to roll out its first supercomputer so students can experiment with AI and machine learning to better prepare for a job market where those skills are now critical to success.
While the use of genAI tools for software development tools is soaring, flying under the radar are issues with code quality, security, and reuse.
Enterprises are rapidly adopting genAI to increase productivity and efficiency, but many are not taking a strategic approach implementing the technology. Because of that, many projects fail or end up costing far more than they should, without an ROI.
Online education sites are scrambling to create and link to courses in generative AI technology to meet an insatiable demand for skilled workers. Udemy's Scott Rogers details what's going on.
A number of startups and cloud service providers are beginning to offer tools to monitor, evaluate and correct problems with generative AI in the hopes of eliminating errors, hallucinations and other systemic problems.
IBM Chief Design Officer Billy Seabrook talked about the company's use of Adobe's generative AI tool Firefly and how it boosted productivity for design staffers.
For more than two years, GitHub has been developing its own genAI platform that can not only write a majority of code for a developer, but also take on mundane IT help desk tasks. COO Kyle Daigle explains what's been going on.
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