Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella believes that DeepSeek will inevitably help the American AI industry rather than hurt it. Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella isn’t pressed about Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s recent success.
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek's model led to increased scrutiny on Microsoft's AI spending.
The Microsoft CEO will have to perform a delicate balancing act over the next four years to keep his company from becoming a target.
Cloud gaming was a boon for Microsoft's earnings this past fiscal quarter, even as the rest of the Xbox division saw revenue fall.
The Microsoft CEO cited Jevons paradox, which stipulates increased efficiency in production drives increased demand.
In an apparent response to the attention on a new AI model out of China, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella posted online
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella had the quote of the week in response to a question from CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin about Elon Musk questioning the ability of the new Stargate Project's financial backers to invest up to $500 billion in AI infrastructure.
Microsoft plans to spend $108 billion on data centres this fiscal year to meet customers' AI demands. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Two of the most powerful tech leaders in the world, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, are not exactly fans of the $500 billion Stargate AI initiative announced by Trump this week.
A late-night post on X from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on an economic concept known as Jevons Paradox sought to counter fears that the emergence of China’s DeepSeek large language model and chatbot would pop the artificial-intelligence bubble.
DeepSeek’s success initially rattled investors’ assumptions about the AI spending wave that has swept through Silicon Valley in recent years.
DeepSeek will not derail Microsoft and Meta spending a combined $US145bn ($232.3bn) on artificial intelligence this year, with Mark Zuckerberg steaming ahead with plans to build a data centre almost the size of Manhattan.