Previous close | 19.95 |
Open | 22.35 |
Bid | 0.00 |
Ask | 0.00 |
Strike | 185.00 |
Expiry date | 2024-11-15 |
Day's range | 19.95 - 22.35 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | N/A |
OpenAI announced a new flagship chatbot called GPT-4o, which can operate in 50 different languages with improved speed and quality, according to Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati. This announcement comes ahead of a potential deal between OpenAI and Apple (AAPL) to put ChatGPT in iPhones, Bloomberg reports. Moor Insights & Strategy Founder and CEO Patrick Moorhead joins Market Domination to give insight into the announcement from OpenAI and its potential deal with Apple. Moorhead outlines why this announcement was important for OpenAI despite lagging evidence about the impact of AI adoption: "Technology is always slower to be adopted than we all think it's going to. In Silicon Valley, it comes overnight. But the reality is to hit typical consumers and even businesses come years after use. But you have to show off the latest and greatest to get people excited. It's kind of like the beginning of an investment bubble, right? Let's get everybody excited. Let's show the capability we're going to hit the trough of disillusionment at some point, but it's to get people tied in." For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Market Domination. This post was written by Nicholas Jacobino
(Bloomberg) -- The top US auto-safety regulator opened an investigation into Waymo, the autonomous-vehicle subsidiary of subsidiary of Alphabet Inc., after 22 incidents in which the company’s cars were involved in collisions or may have violated traffic laws.Most Read from BloombergTrump Vows ‘Day One’ Executive Order Targeting Offshore WindMacron Puts French Banks in Play With Plan to Transform EuropeTesla Rehires Some Supercharger Workers Weeks After Musk’s CutsChina to Start $138 Billion Bond
The U.S. government's highway safety agency has opened another investigation of automated driving systems, this time into crashes involving Waymo's self-driving vehicles. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration posted documents detailing the probe on its website early Tuesday after getting 22 reports of Waymo vehicles either crashing or doing something that may have violated traffic laws. In the past month, the agency has opened at least four investigations of vehicles that can either drive themselves or take on at least some driving functions as it appears to be getting more aggressive in regulating the devices.