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Two days after OpenAI’s Atlas, Microsoft relaunches a nearly identical AI browser
Two days after OpenAI launched its new AI-powered Atlas browser , Microsoft responded with a nearly identical upgrade to Edge Copilot Mode —turning its browser into a full AI assistant. The race to own the next generation of web browsing has officially begun, as both tech giants blur the line between search, chat, and browsing.

OpenAI’s $1 Trillion Ambition: Can $13 Billion Become $1 Trillion in Just Five Years?
OpenAI has an audacious goal: grow from $13 billion to $1 trillion in five years. With massive infrastructure investments, bold product bets, and expanding global influence, the company is rewriting what’s possible in tech and setting the pace for the AI race.

OpenAI’s DevDay 2025 Preview: Will Sam Altman Launch the ChatGPT Browser?
OpenAI’s DevDay 2025 could reveal the long-rumored ChatGPT browser. Here’s what to expect, what’s realistic, and why it could change the way we use the web.

LinkedIn’s CEO Says He Uses AI to Write ‘Almost Every Email,’ Including to His Boss, the Head of Microsoft
LinkedIn CEO Ryan Roslansky admits that AI helps him draft “almost every email,” even to Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. Using Microsoft’s Copilot, he says AI improves clarity and tone for high-stakes communication—while warning against blindly letting AI reply.

Silicon Valley Rep. Ro Khanna says the H-1B visa needs change — but a 'blanket' $100k fee isn't the solution
Silicon Valley Rep. Ro Khanna says the H-1B visa system needs reform but warns that a proposed $100,000 blanket fee on new applications would punish startups and stifle innovation. Instead, Khanna calls for targeted changes like raising wage floors, cracking down on shell companies, and ensuring merit-based selection.
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Samsung, SK Hynix set to supply chips to OpenAI's Stargate project
Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix have signed letters of intent to supply advanced memory chips for OpenAI’s massive Stargate initiative, a multibillion-dollar AI infrastructure project set to reshape global data centers. With demand projected at up to 900,000 wafers per month, this partnership cements South Korea’s dominance in the memory market and underscores how semiconductors are becoming the backbone of the AI arms race.
