Developers in St. Cloud to pay fee for public art if new ordinance passes
Developers in St. Cloud to pay fee for public art if new ordinance passes
Developers in St. Cloud to pay fee for public art if new ordinance passes
Amazon earnings preview: What to expect from the company's fiscal fourth quarter results
Also on our cheat sheet: Spring savings from CeraVe, Gloria Vanderbilt, Hanes and more.
Big Tech companies have ramped up spending to compete on AI. They're compensating shareholders for the effort, too.
Ahead of Google's annual I/O developer conference in May, the tech giant has laid off staff across key teams like Flutter, Dart, Python and others, according to reports from affected employees shared on social media. Google confirmed the layoffs to TechCrunch, but not the specific teams, roles or how many people were let go. "As we’ve said, we’re responsibly investing in our company's biggest priorities and the significant opportunities ahead," said Google spokesperson Alex García-Kummert.
While there are scant details as to the mission profile, I can't help but feel ultra-intrigued by this news from space station developer Gravitics, which was selected to develop orbital platforms to enable rapid response space missions. Gravitics co-founder and CMO Mike DeRosa did clarify in an email that the company is not putting a module on a rocket for a tactically responsive launch. Instead, the mission is related to developing “platforms to enable a new kind of tactically responsive space mission,” he said.
Ahead of its annual GitHub Universe conference in San Francisco early this fall, GitHub announced Copilot Workspace, a dev environment that taps what GitHub describes as "Copilot-powered agents" to help developers brainstorm, plan, build, test and run code in natural language. Jonathan Carter, head of GitHub Next, GitHub's software R&D team, pitches Workspace as somewhat of an evolution of GitHub's AI-powered coding assistant Copilot into a more general tool, building on recently introduced capabilities like Copilot Chat, which lets developers ask questions about code in natural language.
On Monday, the US Supreme Court dismissed Elon Musk’s appeal about a 2018 SEC settlement regarding a “funding secured” tweet. The conservative-majority court passed on Musk’s attempt to throw out the agreement.
With the NFL Draft in the books, fantasy football Matt Harmon breaks down the landing spots he loved to see, and those he's not a fan of.
Toyota invests $1.3B in the plant building the Highlander for new three-row EV and battery pack assembly lines. Thought to be for an electric Higlander.
Volvo wants to make a point about safe its tiny electric EX30 crossover is, so it put the EX30 through a side impact crash test with an EX90.
While it’s expected to pass, the resolution will likely expose a bitter divide between moderate and progressive Democrats over the war in Gaza.
Members of the Rivian subreddit posted details of a survey they received, asking how much they'd be willing to spend on different R2 configurations.
Starbucks laid out five promises ahead of its second quarter earnings aimed at improving results for its employees, customers, farmers, and shareholders.
Zeke is coming home.
A California bill seeks to ban foods with red dye 40, along with 5 other dyes, from schools. Here's what you need to know.
Developer Riley Testut shared an update on Threads this weekend revealing that an iPad app for the Delta emulator has been in the works and is "near completion." The emulator supports a slew of Nintendo systems.
A summer sausage has suddenly become a good luck item for the Minnesota Twins and their resurgent offense.
These comfy sandals for 40% off and over 25,000 Amazon shoppers rave about them.
Yahoo Sports' Charles McDonald breaks down the Vikings' 2024 draft.
Givebutter started in a George Washington University dorm room in 2016 as a software solution to make nonprofit fundraising more transparent and fun. Eight years later, the company is profitable and it just raised $50 million to scale as momentum for nonprofit-focused startups appears to be growing. Friedman told TechCrunch that regardless of the size or scope of the organization he was fundraising for, they all had the same problem: They all used a disjointed mix of one-solution tech software that didn't really make the process better and often came with hidden fees.