Nvidia rolls out OpenAI’s Codex AI agent to all employees
Nvidia is rolling out OpenAI's Codex AI agent to all its employees after a successful early access program involving 10,000 staff.
Read on Economic Times Tech →Nothing has introduced an AI-powered on-device dictation tool that supports over 100 languages, enhancing privacy and accessibility for users.
Why it matters
This development is significant as it showcases the growing trend of integrating advanced AI capabilities directly into consumer devices. On-device AI processing for tasks like dictation offers substantial benefits in terms of user privacy, reduced latency, and improved reliability by minimizing reliance on cloud services. The extensive language support also broadens the tool's accessibility and utility, demonstrating practical AI application in enhancing everyday user experience across a global demographic.
Nothing, a consumer tech company, has released a new dictation feature for its devices that uses artificial intelligence to convert speech to text directly on the device itself. This means your voice data stays private and the tool works faster, supporting over 100 languages for a global audience.
Nvidia is rolling out OpenAI's Codex AI agent to all its employees after a successful early access program involving 10,000 staff.
Read on Economic Times Tech →Google is investing up to $40 billion in AI company Anthropic, a move driven by the race for AI compute capacity and the development of advanced AI models.
Read on TechCrunch →OpenAI is offering $25,000 to security researchers who can find universal 'jailbreak' prompts to bypass the safety guardrails of its new AI model, GPT-5.5, through a 'bio bug bounty' program.
Read on Economic Times Tech →