Latest news with #tech


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Business
- Globe and Mail
CoreWeave (CRWV) Bolsters its Growth Story with New AI Cloud Products
Artificial intelligence (AI) cloud provider CoreWeave (CRWV) continues to bolster its growth story with innovative products. At the Weights & Biases Fully Connected Conference held on Wednesday, the company launched three new AI cloud software products and capabilities to help customers develop, deploy, and iterate AI faster. CRWV stock has rallied about 112% over the past month, reflecting investor optimism about the demand for the company's AI infrastructure. Confident Investing Starts Here: CoreWeave Launches New AI Cloud Products CoreWeave, which acquired AI developer platform Weights & Biases in May 2025, launched three new products – Mission Control Integration, W&B Inference, and W&B Weave Online Evaluations, to enable more developers to build AI models on its cloud platform. The launch of these products marks the first software integration between the two companies following the acquisition. The AI cloud computing platform highlighted that these capabilities integrate CoreWeave's infrastructure with Weights & Biases' intuitive tooling to empower AI engineers in training models, performing inference efficiently, and monitoring AI applications. CRWV's Continued Innovation to Boost Demand CoreWeave's efforts to offer innovative products to customers could further strengthen the demand for its platform. Powered by Nvidia's (NVDA) GPUs (graphics processing units), CoreWeave is well-positioned to capture the massive demand for computing from AI companies. This high-growth stock has rallied 325% to $170 from its IPO (initial public offering) price of $40, thanks to optimism about its prospects amid the ongoing AI wave. However, several analysts are concerned about CoreWeave's high cash burn and lofty valuation. Earlier this week, Bank of America analyst Bradley Sills downgraded CRWV stock to Hold from Buy, citing valuation concerns. Is CRWV a Good Stock to Buy? Overall, Wall Street has a Moderate Buy consensus rating on CoreWeave stock based on six Buys, 11 Holds, and one Sell recommendation. The average CRWV stock price target of $78.53 indicates downside risk of about 54% from current levels. See more CRWV analyst ratings Disclaimer & Disclosure Report an Issue


The Verge
11 hours ago
- The Verge
Posted Jun 19, 2025 at 1:06 PM EDT
Enter the (Glyph) Matrix. Nothing is teasing a 'Glyph Matrix' for the upcoming Nothing Phone 3. A recent leak seemed to show that the phone wouldn't have Glyph lights, but it appears it will have this Matrix instead. The company plans to share more details about the phone on July 1st.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Microsoft-OpenAI Deal on the Brink as Talks Collapse
June 19 - Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) may step back from discussions over its stake in OpenAI as talks around a restructuring deal stall. The tech firm has reportedly hit an impasse over the terms of its future equity in the AI startup if OpenAI shifts to a for-profit model. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Sign with MSFT. The potential shift is seen as key for OpenAI to unlock funding from its most recent round. Without the change, early backers like SoftBank could reduce their commitments. The Japanese investor may trim its planned $30 billion investment by as much as $10 billion if the restructuring doesn't move forward. Microsoft must approve the conversion before year-end to avoid a funding setback. Microsoft has poured over $13 billion into OpenAI since 2019. It currently holds rights to sell OpenAI's tools through Azure and receives 20% of the firm's revenue. Reports suggest the company is unwilling to relinquish these terms. OpenAI, meanwhile, is weighing legal action, accusing Microsoft of potentially anticompetitive behavior. The fallout comes as OpenAI also faces challenges securing regulatory approval for the restructuring, along with a separate lawsuit filed by Elon Musk to block the conversion. Despite tensions, both companies said they remain in discussions and hope to continue working together, according to a joint statement. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


The Verge
15 hours ago
- The Verge
We already got a glimpse at what
Latest Fairphone 6 leak shows off the two-part back. seems to be the repair-friendly Fairphone 6 earlier this month, but now Winfuture is back with another leak that shows how you can remove the lower half of the two-part back cover to reveal the phone's battery. As reported by Winfuture, you still have to unscrew the battery, but it's not glued in, making it far easier to replace. Fairphone is expected to launch the new device on June 25th. 1/3 Image: Winfuture


Gizmodo
16 hours ago
- Gizmodo
Lifetime Subscription to Ad Blocker AdGuard Is Now Near-Zero in Price, Over 90% Off With Code
A lifetime subscription to AdGuard's Family Plan vanquishes annoying ads and keeps your privacy, and it's practically free. If you could wave a magic wand and eliminate all ads from your online browsing — pop-ups, banners, videos, all of them — would you? Of course you would — everybody hates intrusive online ads, and they're getting more clever and harder to elude or close every day. Thankfully, the only magic wand you need to banish them forever is a lifetime subscription to AdGuard's Family Plan, and the only magic word you need is FAMPLAN, the code you use at checkout to give you this sweet deal for just $16 at StackSocial. That gets you a lifetime license that works across Windows, macOS, iOS, and Android, and you can install it on up to nine devices. See at StackSocial More Than an Ad Blocker The name is AdGuard, but it does far more than keep your browsing free from annoying ads. AdGuard is also an ideal tool for hiding your data from trackers and activity analyzers, and protecting your devices from malware and phishing attempts. Whether you're using a desktop, laptop, smartphone, or tablet, AdGuard is the way to maintain your privacy and keep harmful bugs away from your devices. The third component of AdGuard's Family might be the most important if you have kids — its powerful and comprehensive Parental Controls feature. AdGuard allows you to restrict access to objectionable content, so you can keep your kids' online experiences free from harm. It's very customizable, so you can manually add specific sites and types of content to one kid's restrictions while having different settings for another. Easy to Use Your Way AdGuard is not a VPN, although they do also make a VPN that you can find at StackSocial. It's an ingenious software and app that is equally effective across platforms and devices. It's also highly customizable, with simple and intuitive interfaces on whatever device you're using it on. You can create and use your own filters, and if an ad makes it through your defenses — and they will, because they're constantly evolving — you can manually add it to your filter and never see it again. The real blow-away part of this StackSocial deal is the price — a lifetime subscription to AdGuard's Family Plan for a one-time fee of just $16 when you use the code FAMPLAN at checkout. You get up licenses for up to nine devices — desktops, laptops, tablets, smartphones, Macs, PCs, Android — AdGuard is universally compatible, and it's the best way to keep your own browsing free from annoying ads and your family's online experience free from objectionable or harmful content. See at StackSocial