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RE: LeoThread 2025-04-10 05:05

in LeoFinance6 months ago

Here is the daily technology #threadcast for 4/10/24. The goal is to make this a technology "reddit".

Drop all question, comments, and articles relating to #technology and the future. The goal is make it a technology center.

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I want to Start a daily threadcast about crypto dicussion
" Crypto Entertainment Show"
Which Includes everything about crypto

  • News
  • Educational Material
  • Memes
  • Market Overveiw
  • etc

Is this a good idea.
@taskmaster4450le

Yes it is a very good idea.

Google's latest chip is all about reducing one huge hidden cost in AI

Google has unveiled the latest version of its Tensor Processing Unit (TPU), a custom chip built to run artificial intelligence. The Ironwood TPU is positioned for inference rather than training. Inference is considered a high-volume market in the chip world. While Google pays Broadcom for each TPU in commercial production, it still saves more money using TPUs when compared to paying Intel, AMD, and Nvidia to use their chips for inference.

#technology #google #chip #ai

Don’t call it a drone: Zipline’s uncrewed aircraft wants to reinvent retail

Zipline is launching an airborne delivery service in the Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of Mesquite. The company plans to expand to Seattle by the end of the year. Zipline's automated drones can be loaded in seconds, carry small packages for miles, and deposit them with pinpoint accuracy. The company has already flown more than 1.4 million deliveries and covered over 100 million miles.

#technology #ai #robotics #zipline

SpaceX to launch new Intuitive Machines moon lander, lunar satellites in 2027

Intuitive Machines will launch its fourth moon lander along with two relay satellites for a NASA lunar communications network on a Falcon 9 rocket in 2027. The company recently crashed its second moon lander near the Moon's south pole. It plans to launch a third moon lander in 2026. Intuitive Machines' first moon lander tipped over after breaking a landing leg while attempting to land in 2024.

#technology #spacex #moon

Google Launches Firebase Studio, a Full-Stack AI App Builder in Your Browser

Google's Firebase Studio is a cloud-based development environment that brings Gemini-powered AI agents, customizable coding workspaces, and end-to-end deployment tools into the browser. It combines prototyping, coding, and deployment in a single-browser-based IDE and provides always-on AI assistance across the entire development workflow. Firebase Studio can be used to generate full apps using natural language, images, or drawings.

#technology #google #firebase #ai

Elon Musk’s AI company, xAI, launches an API for Grok 3

xAI has made Grok 3 and Grok 3 Mini with 'reasoning' capabilities available via API. Grok 3 is priced at $3 per million input tokens and $15 per million output tokens. xAI has been accused of being misleading in its benchmark reporting for Grok 3 and several users on X have pointed out that Grok 3 via xAI's API has a smaller context window than advertised - the API maxes out at 131,072 tokens.

#technology #ai #xai

Inside Isomorphic Labs, the secretive AI life sciences startup spun off from Google DeepMind

Isomorphic Labs was spun out of Google DeepMind after the tech giant achieved one of the biggest biological breakthroughs in the last 50 years - AlphaFold2, an AI system that can predict the structures of proteins. The company recently made AlphaFold3 available to the scientific community for non-commercial use. It claims that the new system can predict the structures of and interactions between all life's molecules. The company aims to eventually solve all diseases through AI-powered drug discovery.

#technology #ai #isomorphic

Bitcoin to hit $250,000 this year and Magnificent 7 to adopt stablecoins, Cardano founder predicts

Bitcoin could hit $250,000 as early as this year with technology giants such as Microsoft and Apple entering the cryptocurrency space, industry veteran and founder of the Cardano blockchain Charles Hoskinson told CNBC.

Crypto markets have been hammered amid a sell-off of risk assets stoked by U.S. President Donald Trump's "reciprocal tariffs" on countries across the world. Bitcoin traded below the $77,000 mark on over the last week, but on Wednesday spiked above $82,000 as Trump dropped levies to 10% for 90 days for most countries to allow for trade negotiations.

Sill, bitcoin has fallen far from its more than $100,000 record high hit in January — even as industry players remain bullish on the cryptocurrency.

Hoskinson, who has been in the crypto industry for more than a decade and helped co-found the Ethereum blockchain, said he believes bitcoin will reach $250,000 "by the end of this year or next year."

"What will happen is that the tariff stuff will be a dud, and that people will realize that the world is willing to negotiate, and it's really just U.S. versus China. And a lot of people will side with us. Some people side with China," Hoskinson told CNBC during a recording of the "Beyond The Valley" podcast on Tuesday.

"The markets will stabilize a little bit, and they'll get used to the new normal, and then the Fed[eral Reserve] will lower interest rates, and then you'll have a lot of fast, cheap money, and then it'll pour into crypto."

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy says AI costs will come down over time even as company invests 'aggressively'

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy released his annual letter to shareholders on Thursday.

Our total revenue grew 11% year-over-year ("YoY") from $575B to $638B. By segment, North America revenue increased 10% YoY from $353B to $387B, International revenue grew 9% YoY from $131B to $143B, and AWS revenue increased 19% YoY, from $91B to $108B. For perspective, just 10 years ago, AWS revenue was $4.6B; and in that same year, Amazon's total revenue was $89B.

Amazon's operating income in 2024 improved 86% YoY, from $36.9B (an operating margin of 6.4%) to $68.6B (an operating margin of 10.8%). Free Cash Flow, adjusted for equipment finance leases improved from $35.5B in 2023 to $36.2B.

Apart from the financial results, we made our customers' lives meaningfully better and easier. In our Stores business, we substantially expanded selection, continued lowering prices (independent research firm, Profitero, found Amazon the lowest-priced online U.S. Retailer for the eighth year in a row), and for the second year in a row, we shipped at record speed to our Prime members. AWS launched a slew of new infrastructure and AI services that make it even easier to build remarkable customer experiences, including our latest custom AI silicon (Trainium2), a new set of frontier foundation models in Amazon Nova, and significant expansion of available models and features in our leading Generative AI ("GenAI") services Amazon SageMaker and Amazon Bedrock.

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Related, why can't we help the hundreds of millions of people without broadband connectivity?
There are about 400-500 million households around the world, most in small, rural towns that don't have access to broadband connectivity. They can't leverage the Internet to learn, shop, do business, access entertainment, and communicate the same way people take for granted in bigger cities. This digital divide is what Project Kuiper, our low Earth orbit satellite network, aims to solve. We're just launching our first production satellites, and will ultimately have over 3,200 in orbit over the next few years. While capital-intensive to launch, we believe Kuiper will be a meaningful operating income and ROIC business for us.

Apple
shares declined 5% Thursday, giving back some of Wednesday’s gains that pushed the iPhone maker to its best day since January 1998.

The technology giant, down 15% so far this month and nearly 25% since the start of 2025, surged more than 15% Wednesday after President Donald Trump announced a 90-day pause on some tariffs and dropped the tariff on most countries to 10% to allow negotiations.

"While waiting to take off on the runway at DCA just now, another plane struck our wing," he wrote. "Thankfully, everyone is safe. Just a reminder: Recent cuts to the FAA weaken our skies and public safety."

The FAA will investigate. American Airlines said both aircraft taxied to the terminal and were taken out of service to be inspected by maintenance teams. The damage was limited to a winglet on each aircraft.

Operations at the airport have come under intense scrutiny since a Jan. 29 fatal collision between an American Airlines regional jet and a U.S. Army helicopter, killing 67 people. The FAA said this week it installed a new management team to oversee air traffic control at Reagan National.

Senators last month pressed the FAA for failing to act on thousands of reports of helicopters in dangerous proximity to airplanes near Reagan National.

The Ethereum ETFs allow investors to gain exposure to digital assets without the need to buy and store the virtual coin themselves. Options give investors the right to buy or sell an asset at a predetermined price by a set date.

Crypto options are popular because they allow investors to gain exposure to the performance of an asset, rather than just investing in it. Traders are able to bet on the future price of a digital coin, and the market for doing so is much bigger than the spot one. Options trading on ETFs adds more liquidity to the crypto investment space, experts previously told Decrypt.

Why not practically everything?

Why should we be the only sellers of these items? Millions of third-party merchants and small sellers offer similar or unique items. Why not let customers choose the selection, price, and delivery speed they prefer from among these millions of sellers?

After struggling for a couple years to create awareness for sellers' selection, we asked ourselves why not show their selection on the same product detail pages as our first-party selection (where all the traffic was)?

Why not allow our sellers to also store items in our fulfillment network, enable those items to have fast, Prime delivery, and fulfill those items for sellers (a program called Fulfillment by Amazon)?

Starting in 1995, we asked why can't we offer customers every in-print book?

Then, we asked, why limit ourselves to in-print—why can't we also offer every out-of-print book?

Why not offer every book, ever written, in any language—all available within 60 seconds on a device that's light and fits in the palm of your hand (Kindle)?

When we offer reviews, why must they all come from professional "experts?" Customers are great resources and will be brutally honest. Why not include customer reviews even if they sometimes dissuade a purchase?

Why not offer more than Books? What about Music, Video, Electronics, Tools, Kitchen, Apparel, Home Furnishings?

A Why Culture
Every year in my annual letter, I try to share insight into what makes Amazon tick. At the highest level, we're aiming to be Earth's most customer-centric company, making customers' lives better and easier every day. This is not easy to do in general, let alone year after year. In fact, it's actually quite hard, especially with the rapid rate of change in technology, customer habits, and new products from large and small companies alike. If we want to have a chance at succeeding in our mission, we have to constantly question everything around us.

Prime Video continued to offer compelling original shows, including new seasons for Fallout, Reacher, The Boys, and The Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power, movies like Road House, The Idea of You, and Red One, live sports like Thursday Night Football and UEFA Champions League in Europe (with the NBA and NASCAR coming in 2025), and new selection, highlighted by Apple TV+ joining Prime Video Channels. We launched a series of new Kindle devices that included a new color version, a larger Scribe option, and our fastest Paperwhites ever (the collection of which drove the highest Kindle unit sales for a single quarter in over a decade). And, we continued to add more selection, price transparency, and same day shipping for Amazon Pharmacy.