Google, founded in 1998 by Larry Page and Sergey Brin while they were Ph.D. students at Stanford University, began as a search engine designed to improve the way people accessed information online. Its algorithm, PageRank, set it apart by prioritizing the relevance and quality of search results, rapidly establishing Google as the dominant player in internet search. The company's influence has expanded far beyond search, encompassing a broad array of services including Gmail, Google Maps, Google Drive, and the Android operating system. Known for its innovation and acquisition strategy, Google has become a cornerstone of digital life, shaping how people interact with technology and information. Its impact on both technology and society is profound, driven by a relentless pursuit of innovation and data-driven solutions.
Trilateral Research’s Amelia Williams examines a growing blind spot in enterprise A.I. adoption: procurement. As organizations rush to deploy powerful A.I. systems, procurement teams often make governance, compliance and data protection decisions without adequately managing risk.
Alexandr Wang defended Meta’s Muse Spark and said the company’s next models will be more competitive.
At commencements from Carnegie Mellon to the University of Arizona, Jensen Huang, Eric Schmidt and other tech leaders delivered similar advice about A.I. and got very different receptions. The speeches reflected a familiar Silicon Valley optimism, but many graduates heard something more complicated.