MICROSOFT NVIDIA

Jun 03 2026TECHNOLOGY

Microsoft's AI Assistant Scout: What It Does and Why People Are Worried

Microsoft recently introduced Scout, an AI assistant that can handle phone calls, read emails, and organize schedules without needing constant supervision. This is part of a new group of AI tools called "Autopilot, " which work independently instead of just helping users like older assistants did. S

reading time less than a minute
Jun 02 2026TECHNOLOGY

Nvidia’s New PC Move: AI Chips, Robots and a Quiet Power Play

Nvidia is pushing its powerful processors into ordinary computers, hoping to tap the growing need for smart assistants that can control a PC by themselves. The company showed off its AI tools at a tech event in Taipei, where it also announced a robot partnership with China’s Unitree Robotics and

reading time less than a minute
Jun 01 2026TECHNOLOGY

A Tiny Powerhouse: Desktop AI That Can Handle a Trillion‑Parameter Model

NVIDIA has unveiled the DGX Station for Windows, a compact machine that brings data‑center‑level AI power right into office desks. The device runs on Windows, making it compatible with the majority of corporate workstations that traditionally use Linux for heavy AI tasks. It is built around NVIDIA’s

reading time less than a minute
May 17 2026TECHNOLOGY

Urgent Fix Needed for Vulnerable Exchange Servers

Microsoft’s latest alert focuses on a critical flaw, known as CVE‑2026‑42897, that targets on‑premises Exchange Server installations. The bug allows attackers to send a specially crafted email that, when opened in Outlook Web Access, can run malicious JavaScript right inside the user’s browser. Bec

reading time less than a minute
Apr 27 2026TECHNOLOGY

NVIDIA Adds Taiwan Memory Maker to Power Next‑Gen AI Chips

NVIDIA is boosting its Agentic AI platform, Vera Rubin, by adding a new memory supplier from Taiwan. The company now uses LPDDR5X chips from Nanya Technology, a first for the firm’s high‑performance AI servers. This move gives NVIDIA more flexibility. Vera Rubin relies on two kinds of memory: the

reading time less than a minute
Apr 11 2026TECHNOLOGY

Microsoft Wants You to Treat Copilot as Real, Not Just a Joke

Microsoft has decided that its AI helper, Copilot, should be taken seriously. Earlier, the software carried a warning that it was “for entertainment purposes only. ” The company now says that statement is old news and will be updated soon. The warning first appeared when Copilot was a simple

reading time less than a minute
Apr 09 2026TECHNOLOGY

NVIDIA’s $2B Bet on Marvell: Why This Tech Tie-Up Could Change AI Chips

NVIDIA just dropped $2 billion into Marvell, a chipmaker specializing in custom AI hardware. This isn’t just a cash splash—it’s a strategic move to tighten their partnership in a growing fight over AI infrastructure. NVIDIA already dominates the AI chip market, but this deal helps it push competitor

reading time less than a minute
Apr 07 2026TECHNOLOGY

Microsoft fixes confusing AI rules after users call it out

Microsoft just changed how it talks about its Copilot AI after people noticed a strange phrase in the rules. The company used to say Copilot is "for entertainment purposes only, " which sounded like it was just a fun toy. But Microsoft actually sells Copilot as a serious tool for work. Now, after us

reading time less than a minute
Apr 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

Copilot’s “Fun‑Only” Warning: What It Means for Users

Microsoft has added a clear caveat to its Copilot service: it is meant for entertainment, not critical decision‑making. The company’s latest terms of use state that the tool can err and should not be depended on for serious advice. Users are urged to exercise caution and use the product at their own

reading time less than a minute
Apr 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

Microsoft’s Copilot faces a reality check from its own rules

Microsoft spent massive amounts of money to make Copilot a standard feature in its products. Ads called it an essential AI helper for work. But its own terms quietly say something very different. A hidden clause in the fine print calls Copilot “for entertainment use only” and warns users not to trus

reading time less than a minute