Alphabet Inc. investors are experiencing a moment of vindication as the stock surged to a new high. Click here to read an analysis of GOOG stock now.
An AI judge gets a tryout during the X Games this week in Aspen, Colorado. The experimental Google Cloud-based tech will judge snowboarding superpipe.
The doodle is titled 'Rise of the Half Moon'. Its description page says the doodle has been crested as a recurring card game. "You'll be over the (half) moon about this new Doodle game series! Join the celestial card game where players must connect the phases of the lunar cycle to earn points and against the January Half Moon.
Google is celebrating January’s final half moon with a Doodle it released on Jan. 23. The Doodle, called “ The Rise of the Half Moon ,” is part of an interactive game series. In this game, you connect the phases of the lunar cycle to earn points. You play against the computer, or the “January Half Moon,” as Google calls it.
Judging sports competitions is subjective. X Games CEO Jeremy Bloom believes artificial intelligence could lead to fairer outcomes.
From a rejected $1 million offer to becoming a multi-billion-dollar behemoth, Google's story is a testament to the power of innovation, persistence, and timing.
Google celebrates the final half moon of January with an entertaining animated card game in its latest Doodle. Users can interact with the lunar cycle
The X Games will experiment judging halfpipe runs this week in Aspen using artificial intelligence, the cutting-edge technology that could someday play a role in the way subjectively judged sports are scored.
Jamie Dimon, the billionaire head of the U.S.’ biggest bank, lauded Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the richest man on the planet and a key part of President Donald Trump’s administration, on Wednesday, squashing a long-running beef between the billionaires’ companies as Dimon becomes the latest billionaire warming to Musk or Trump.
Tech billionaires including Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos were given prime positions at Donald Trump‘s inauguration Monday.
In its early days, the quirky tech startup known as Google adopted a visionary corporate credo: "Don't be evil." That later evolved into the motto: "Do the right thing," reflecting the idealistic ambitions of the company's founders that its technology could be a force for good.