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WWW.TECHSPOT.COMNvidia nearly doubles AMD's R&D budget – Intel's spending dwarfs both, but struggles to competeThe big picture: The competitive strength of hardware makers is often gauged by their research and development expenditure. However, an analysis of recent financial reports from various tech giants reveals that higher R&D spending does not always guarantee success. Intel's recent struggles and Nvidia's astronomical growth driven by the AI boom have broken conventional assumptions. Recent insights from Tech Fund reveal a widening disparity in R&D budgets between competing hardware makers AMD and Nvidia, a key factor in Nvidia's increasing market dominance. In that same mix we could look at Intel, which currently appears much weaker than both despite dwarfing their R&D spending.According to Tech Fund's analysis of Nvidia's and AMD's R&D expenditures over the past decade, Nvidia now spends twice as much as AMD. In 2013, their R&D budgets were roughly equal, but Nvidia's has since surged to approximately $12 billion, while AMD's has grown to ~$6 billion.This disparity is further accentuated by the allocation of spending. Nvidia focuses nearly all its R&D efforts on AI, while AMD's smaller budget is spread across GPUs, CPUs, AI, and FPGA chips.Although AMD has made impressive gains in the CPU market recent generations of its CPUs have soundly defeated Intel it continues to struggle against Nvidia in the GPU sector.Intel currently faces seemingly endless trouble in CPUs, GPUs, and other areas despite outspending Nvidia's and AMD's R&D by a wide margin.Source: Tom's Hardware (click to enlarge)According to Tom's Hardware, Intel allocated $16 billion to R&D in 2023 double the combined budgets of Nvidia and AMD. For 2024, the company projects R&D, market growth, and acquisition costs will range between $17 billion and $20 billion.These funds are spread across diverse ventures, including CPUs, GPUs, quantum computing, and foundries, with significant hopes pinned on its forthcoming 18A process node.Source: App Economy InsightsDespite this hefty investment, Intel's market capitalization hovers at around $107 billion, ranking 160th globally. In contrast, AMD ranks 45th with a valuation of $229 billion or more than twice of Chipzilla's. Nvidia, with its near-total devotion to AI, has entered the $3 trillion club and is vying with Apple for the title of the world's most valuable company.Nvidia's meteoric rise is particularly striking when compared to Apple's R&D spending. The Cupertino giant spent $27 billion on R&D in 2023 and $31 billion between September 2023 and September 2024. While some predict the eventual collapse of the AI bubble, which could bring Nvidia back down to Earth, there are no immediate signs of such a downturn.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views
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WWW.TECHSPOT.COMDetachable Ethernet cable brings magnetic convenience to networkingIn a nutshell: Japanese electronics manufacturer Sanwa Supply has introduced an innovative Ethernet solution that borrows heavily from Apple's MagSafe concept. The Sanwa KB-SL6ABA series is a two-part design consisting of an adapter and cable. One end of the adapter looks like a standard Ethernet connection and plugs into the existing port on your computer, just like any other network cable. The opposite end features a set of electrical pins and magnets that attach it to the included Ethernet cable. The Sanwa solution is essentially a quick-release cable. The combo comes in five different configurations based on cable length from one meter to 10 meters (1m, 2m, 3m, 5m, 10m). Like Apple's power connector, it is meant to help reduce the risk of damage to hardware or personal injury by accidentally tripping over a cable.The CAT6A cable measures 3.8 mm in diameter (28 gauge) and is made up of eight cores in four pairs. It is rated for 10 Gbps with a transmission bandwidth of 500 MHz. Sanwa said the cable features a soft outer jacket that makes it easy to route around walls and furniture.If you are working in an environment with lots of foot traffic, have pets, or just happen to be extremely clumsy, this could quickly pay for itself. I could also see it being incredibly useful in hard-to-reach situations where simply tugging on the cable to unplug it would be easier than getting a hand in to squeeze a clip.Pricing starts at 4,180 Yen (around $27) for the one meter variant and scales to roughly $43 for the 10 meter model. It is unclear if Sanwa plans to bring the cable to markets other than its home country but for those willing to pay the premium, international shipping is an option.If successful, perhaps we could we see this concept brought to other cables. I'm not sure of the technical feasibility of using it with other connector types but it could be worth looking into. // Related Stories0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views
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WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COMElon Musks Neuralink to test if its brain implant can control a robotic armElon Musks Neuralink company has said its about to begin testing a technology that could enable someone with paralysis to control a robotic arm with their thoughts.Were excited to announce the approval and launch of a new feasibility trial to extend brain-computer interface (BCI) control using the N1 Implant to an investigational assistive robotic arm, Neuralink said in a post on X on Monday.Recommended VideosIt described the development as an important first step towards restoring not only digital freedom, but also physical freedom. Neuralink has been developing a brain-computer interface (BCI) since its founding in 2016, and following trials involving animals, it successfully implanted its first BCI into a human volunteer earlier this year. In April, it released a video showing the volunteer, quadriplegic Noland Arbaugh, using his thoughts to control a cursor to move chess pieces on a computer screen.RelatedNeuralink revealed in August that it had implanted a brain chip into a second volunteer, and it has plans for a further eight trials over the coming months. Alongside its ongoing work, Neuralink now wants to expand the use of the technology to see how effective it can be for controlling an external device like a robotic arm, which if successful has the potential to provide those with paralysis with a new level of independence.Neuralink uses a robot to surgically place the BCIs ultra-fine and flexible threads in a part of the brain that controls movement intention. Once in place, the implant, which is cosmetically invisible, is capable of recording and transmitting brain signals wirelessly to an app that decodes movement intention, the company said.The main goal of Neuralinks current work involving human volunteers is to evaluate the safety of the implant as well as the effectiveness of the surgical robot performing it. Its also assessing the actual capabilities of the interface.Musk founded Neuralink with a small team of scientists and engineers. Other companies are known to be exploring similar technology, with BrainGate, for example, having enabled a human patient with paralysis to communicate his thoughts by converting his imagined handwriting into text.Editors Recommendations0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views
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WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COMUnexpected odor reported at the International Space StationOperators of the International Space Station (ISS) were recently alerted to what was described as an unexpected odor emanating the Russian Progress cargo spacecraft that docked with the orbital outpost on Saturday.After launching from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, the Progress spacecraft brought with it about 2.5 tons of supplies and other cargo for the seven-person crew aboard the orbital outpost. The spacecrafts arrival at the stations Poisk module appeared to go smoothly, but when Russian cosmonauts Ivan Vagner and Aleksandr Gorbunov opened the spacecrafts hatch, they noticed an odor along with drops of an unidentified liquid.Recommended VideosOut of an abundance of caution, the cosmonauts left the area and closed the Poisk hatch to the rest of the Russian segment. Space station air scrubbers and contaminant sensors then monitored the stations atmosphere, and on Sunday, flight controllers were able to confirm that the air quality inside the ISS was at normal levels.RelatedThere are no concerns for the crew, and as of Sunday afternoon, the crew is working to open the hatch between Poisk and Progress while all other space station operations are proceeding as planned, NASA saidin a post on X.In an update posted on its website on Monday, NASA said that Roscosmos cosmonauts have since reported that the odor quickly disappeared, and that it may have been caused by outgassing from materials inside the cargo spacecraft, though it failed to mention anything about the droplets. Cargo transfer from the Progress capsule to the main station are now proceeding on schedule.Its not the first time that a Russian spacecraft docked at the ISS has been at the center of attention. A more serious event involved a dramatic coolant leak on a Soyuz spacecraft in December 2022. After investigating the issue, it was determined that the damaged craft might not be safe enough to bring home the three crew members who arrived in it, so Russia sent up a replacement. And in 2021, Russias docked Nauka module caused a scare when its thrusters suddenly fired up, temporarily pushing the ISS out of orientation. No one aboard the station was injured in the incident and the facility was soon returned to its correct orientation.Editors Recommendations0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views
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WWW.WSJ.COMRoche to Acquire Poseida Therapeutics in a Deal Worth Up to $1.5 BillionThe deal allows the pharmaceutical company to bring in house its current partner with the aim of developing cell therapies in oncology, immunology and neurology.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 10 Views
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WWW.WSJ.COMGoogle Proposes Further Changes to Search Results in EuropeThe Alphabet-owned company said it had to make substantial changes to the services it can provide in the continent to satisfy requests from competitors and regulators.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views
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WWW.WSJ.COMGenesis Review: Rise of the New MachinesWill the age of artificial intelligence see a return to a premodern acceptance of unexplained authority? Can human dignity be safeguarded?0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 10 Views
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ARSTECHNICA.COMDOJ wraps up ad tech trial: Google is three times a monopolistWill the DOJ go two for two? DOJ wraps up ad tech trial: Google is three times a monopolist Google argued DOJ proved the "exact opposite" of existence of ad tech monopoly. Ashley Belanger Nov 25, 2024 4:00 pm | 34 Attorney Karen Dunn of Googles defense team leaves the Albert V. Bryan United States Courthouse on September 9, 2024 in Alexandria, Virginia. Credit: Alex Wong / Staff | Getty Images News Attorney Karen Dunn of Googles defense team leaves the Albert V. Bryan United States Courthouse on September 9, 2024 in Alexandria, Virginia. Credit: Alex Wong / Staff | Getty Images News Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreOne of the fastest monopoly trials on record wound down Monday, as US District Court Judge Leonie Brinkema heard closing arguments on Google's alleged monopoly in a case over the company's ad tech.Department of Justice lawyer Aaron Teitelbaum kicked things off by telling Brinkema that Google "rigged" ad auctions, allegedly controlling "multiple parts" of services used to place ads all over the Internet, unfairly advantaging itself in three markets, The New York Times reported."Google is once, twice, three times a monopolist," Teitelbaum said, while reinforcing that "these are the markets that make the free and open Internet possible."Teitelbaum likened Google to a "predator," preying on publishers that allegedly had no viable other options for ad revenue but to stick with Google's products. An executive for News Corp. testified that the news organization felt it was being held "hostage" because it risked losing $9 million in 2017 if it walked away from Google's advertising platform.Brinkema, who wasted no time and frequently urged lawyers to avoid repeating themselves or dragging out litigation with unnecessary testimony throughout the trial, reportedly pushed back.In one instance she asked, "What would happen if a company had produced the best product," but Teitelbaum rejected the idea that Google's ad tech platform had competed on the merits."The problem is Google hasnt done that," Teitelbaum said, alleging that instead better emerging products "died out," unable to compete on the merits.According to Vidushi Dyall, the director of legal analysis for the Chamber of Progress (a trade group representing Google), this lack of advertiser testimony or evidence of better products could be key flaws in the DOJ's argument. When Brinkema asked what better products Google had stamped out, the DOJ came up blank, Dyall posted in a thread on X (formerly Twitter).Further, Dyall wrote, Brinkema "noted that the DOJs case was notably absent of direct testimony from advertisers." The judge apparently criticized the DOJ for focusing too much on how publishers were harmed while providing "no direct evidence about advertisers and how satisfied/dissatisfied they are with the system," Dyall wrote."Arent advertisers themselves the customers?" Brinkema reportedly asked. "Dont you think it would be valuable to hear from them?"Googles lead lawyer, Karen Dunn, told Brinkema that the DOJ seemingly presented "the exact opposite" of the proof needed to establish Google's alleged monopoly, the NYT reported.Ruling expected in coming monthsBrinkema is expected to rule in the ad-tech trial in the coming months. Some analysts predict that the DOJ's success in proving Google's monopoly in search will not influence her decision, but she has confirmed that she would consider the DOJ's request to break up Google's ad business.That means Google could be facing a second major threat to its overall revenue after the DOJ recently pushed to force the sale of Chrome to fix Google's search monopoly. According to The New York Times, the "ad-tech division generated $31 billion last year for Alphabet, Googles parent company, or 10 percent of its sales." So while it's not search empire money, it's still a good chunk of Google's business.The DOJ wants Brinkema to order Google to sell off Google Ad Manager, the opaque ad exchange that the DOJ alleged has such little transparency that it allows Google to charge monopoly prices for ads.Brinkema has said that she expected to use the DOJ's closing arguments today to answer her remaining questions. Experts following the trial repeatedly noted that the 80-year-old judge quickly grasped the technical concepts involved, despite the case being exceptionally laden with industry jargon.Which way the judge is leaning remains unclear. But while Dyall praised Brinkema's seeming skepticism during the DOJ's closing argumentswhich reportedly ended by calling Google an "authoritarian intermediary" in the ad industryBrinkema proved just as reserved when parsing Google's defense during the trial. In one notable example, when one witness tried to suck up time on the stand describing how Google helps the federal government, Brinkema incited laughter by abruptly shutting it down, the NYT reported."This is sounding more like PR than getting to the issues in this case," Brinkema reportedly said.Ashley BelangerSenior Policy ReporterAshley BelangerSenior Policy Reporter Ashley is a senior policy reporter for Ars Technica, dedicated to tracking social impacts of emerging policies and new technologies. She is a Chicago-based journalist with 20 years of experience. 34 Comments0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views
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ARSTECHNICA.COMOpenAI blamed NYT for tech problem erasing evidence of copyright abuseIt's not "lost," just "inadvertently removed" OpenAI blamed NYT for tech problem erasing evidence of copyright abuse OpenAI denies deleting evidence, asks why NYT didnt back up data. Ashley Belanger Nov 25, 2024 1:58 pm | 73 Credit: NurPhoto / Contributor | NurPhoto Credit: NurPhoto / Contributor | NurPhoto Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreOpenAI keeps deleting data that could allegedly prove the AI company violated copyright laws by training ChatGPT on authors' works. Apparently largely unintentional, the sloppy practice is seemingly dragging out early court battles that could determine whether AI training is fair use.Most recently, The New York Times accused OpenAI of unintentionally erasing programs and search results that the newspaper believed could be used as evidence of copyright abuse.The NYT apparently spent more than 150 hours extracting training data, while following a model inspection protocol that OpenAI set up precisely to avoid conducting potentially damning searches of its own database. This process began in October, but by mid-November, the NYT discovered that some of the data gathered had been erased due to what OpenAI called a "glitch."Looking to update the court about potential delays in discovery, the NYT asked OpenAI to collaborate on a joint filing admitting the deletion occurred. But OpenAI declined, instead filing a separate response calling the newspaper's accusation that evidence was deleted "exaggerated" and blaming the NYT for the technical problem that triggered the data deleting.OpenAI denied deleting "any evidence," instead admitting only that file-system information was "inadvertently removed" after the NYT requested a change that resulted in "self-inflicted wounds." According to OpenAI, the tech problem emerged because NYT was hoping to speed up its searches and requested a change to the model inspection set-up that OpenAI warned "would yield no speed improvements and might even hinder performance."The AI company accused the NYT of negligence during discovery, "repeatedly running flawed code" while conducting searches of URLs and phrases from various newspaper articles and failing to back up their data. Allegedly the change that NYT requested "resulted in removing the folder structure and some file names on one hard drive," which "was supposed to be used as a temporary cache for storing OpenAI data, but evidently was also used by Plaintiffs to save some of their search results (apparently without any backups)."Once OpenAI figured out what happened, data was restored, OpenAI said. But the NYT alleged that the only data that OpenAI could recover did "not include the original folder structure and original file names" and therefore "is unreliable and cannot be used to determine where the News Plaintiffs copied articles were used to build Defendants models."In response, OpenAI suggested that the NYT could simply take a few days and re-run the searches, insisting, "contrary to Plaintiffs insinuations, there is no reason to think that the contents of any files were lost." But the NYT does not seem happy about having to retread any part of model inspection, continually frustrated by OpenAI's expectation that plaintiffs must come up with search terms when OpenAI understands its models best.OpenAI claimed that it has consulted on search terms and been "forced to pour enormous resources" into supporting the NYT's model inspection efforts while continuing to avoid saying how much it's costing. Previously, the NYT accused OpenAI of seeking to profit off these searches, attempting to charge retail prices instead of being transparent about actual costs.Now, OpenAI appears to be more willing to conduct searches on behalf of NYT that it previously sought to avoid. In its filing, OpenAI asked the court to order news plaintiffs to "collaborate with OpenAI to develop a plan for reasonable, targeted searches to be executed either by Plaintiffs or OpenAI."How that might proceed will be discussed at a hearing on December 3. OpenAI said it was committed to preventing future technical issues and was "committed to resolving these issues efficiently and equitably."Its not the first time OpenAI deleted dataThis isn't the only time that OpenAI has been called out for deleting data in a copyright case.In May, book authors, including Sarah Silverman and Paul Tremblay, told a US district court in California that OpenAI admitted to deleting the controversial AI training data sets at issue in that litigation. Additionally, OpenAI admitted that "witnesses knowledgeable about the creation of these datasets have apparently left the company," authors' court filing said. Unlike the NYT, book authors seem to suggest that OpenAI's deleting appeared potentially suspicious."OpenAIs delay campaign continues," the authors' filing said, alleging that "evidence of what was contained in these datasets, how they were used, the circumstances of their deletion and the reasons for" the deletion "are all highly relevant."The judge in that case, Robert Illman, wrote that OpenAI's dispute with authors has so far required too much judicial intervention, noting that both sides "are not exactly proceeding through the discovery process with the degree of collegiality and cooperation that might be optimal." Wired noted similarly the NYT case is "not exactly a lovefest."As these cases proceed, plaintiffs in both cases are struggling to decide on search terms that will surface the evidence they seek. While the NYT case is bogged down by OpenAI seemingly refusing to conduct any searches yet on behalf of publishers, the book author case is differently being dragged out by authors failing to provide search terms. Only four of the 15 authors suing have sent search terms, as their deadline for discovery approaches on January 27, 2025.NYT judge rejects key part of fair use defenseOpenAI's defense primarily hinges on courts agreeing that copying authors' works to train AI is a transformative fair use that benefits the public, but the judge in the NYT case, Ona Wang, rejected a key part of that fair use defense late last week.To win their fair use argument, OpenAI was trying to modify a fair use factor regarding "the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work" by invoking a common argument that the factor should be modified to include the "public benefits the copying will likely produce."Part of this defense tactic sought to prove that the NYT's journalism benefits from generative AI technologies like ChatGPT, with OpenAI hoping to topple NYT's claim that ChatGPT posed an existential threat to its business. To that end, OpenAI sought documents showing that the NYT uses AI tools, creates its own AI tools, and generally supports the use of AI in journalism outside the court battle.On Friday, however, Wang denied OpenAI's motion to compel this kind of evidence. Wang deemed it irrelevant to the case despite OpenAI's claims that if AI tools benefit the NYT's journalism, that benefit would be relevant to OpenAIs fair use defense."But the Supreme Court specifically states that a discussion of 'public benefits' must relate to the benefits from the copying," Wang wrote in a footnote, not "whether the copyright holder has admitted that other uses of its copyrights may or may not constitute fair use, or whether the copyright holder has entered into business relationships with other entities in the defendants industry."This likely stunts OpenAI's fair use defense by cutting off an area of discovery that OpenAI previously fought hard to pursue. It essentially leaves OpenAI to argue that its copying of NYT content specifically serves a public good, not the act of AI training generally.In February, Ars forecasted that the NYT might have the upper hand in this case because the NYT already showed that sometimes ChatGPT would reproduce word-for-word snippets of articles. That will likely make it harder to convince the court that training ChatGPT by copying NYT articles is a transformative fair use, as Google Books famously did when copying books to create a searchable database.For OpenAI, the strategy seems to be to erect as strong a fair use case as possible to defend its most popular release. And if the court sides with OpenAI on that question, it won't really matter how much evidence the NYT surfaces during model inspection. But if the use is not seen as transformative and then the NYT can prove the copying harms its businesswithout benefiting the publicOpenAI could risk losing this important case when the verdict comes in 2025. And that could have implications for book authors' suit as well as other litigation, expected to drag into 2026.Ashley BelangerSenior Policy ReporterAshley BelangerSenior Policy Reporter Ashley is a senior policy reporter for Ars Technica, dedicated to tracking social impacts of emerging policies and new technologies. She is a Chicago-based journalist with 20 years of experience. 73 Comments0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 9 Views