The Market’s AI Fanfare Is Running Into a Harsh Political Reality
Anthropic’s hopes for a blockbuster IPO could depend as much on the ballot box as on investors.
Connecting Global Economies
Anthropic’s hopes for a blockbuster IPO could depend as much on the ballot box as on investors.
With plans to boost prices, Apple is counting on an affluent user base able to shell out $1,000 or more for a device.
The firm has surged from a handful of staffers to 3,500 with plans to recruit more than 500 employees this year.
Consumer tech is being squeezed as chip production falls short and national-security fears limit buying from China.
Loudoun welcomes them and reaps prosperity, while Nimby attitudes prevail in nearby Prince William.
Between a new executive order, a clash with Anthropic and high-tech wars, the U.S. is stumbling into an AI arms race that the world is struggling to control.
Startups are attempting to put energy storage anywhere and everywhere.
The president’s announcement was an endorsement of the once-mighty chip maker’s turnaround plan.
Global success of AI-related companies in South Korea, Taiwan and Japan stokes red-hot market fever.
Wielding its war chest to win data-center customers for its silicon, the world’s second-biggest company is taking a page from No. 1.