News
Opinion
16don MSNOpinion
When I wrote about DeepSeek’s remarkable AI breakthrough in January, I didn’t expect to see my predictions validated so quickly. Yet here we are, barely three months later, watching Microsoft Corp. — ...
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella moved quickly to get DeepSeek’s R1 deployed on Azure in January. Nadella appeared to have anticipated the rise of a breakthrough like R1, and now he says a new bar has been ...
Microsoft is bringing Chinese AI company DeepSeek’s R1 model to its Azure AI Foundry platform and GitHub today. The R1 model, which has rocked US financial markets this week because it can be ...
The model built by Bill Gates and Paul Allen remains decades later. What’s changed is how Microsoft responds to a flop.
When I wrote about DeepSeek's efficiency revolution in January, I called it a "master class" that "shatters the myth that AI supremacy requires a billion-dollar checkbook." Microsoft's widespread ...
Microsoft Azure customers do not need to rent dedicated servers for DeepSeek, but they still pay for underlying computing power, leading to variable pricing depending on how efficiently they run the ...
Microsoft may be looking to develop its own AI models to reduce its reliance on OpenAI and gain greater control over the AI ...
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella saw the writing on the silicon and fast-tracked DeepSeek’s R1 into Azure. At a closed-door company town hall, sources say Nadella practically evangelised DeepSeek’s ...
South Korea's data protection authority said on Thursday that Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek transferred ...
AI advancements like DeepSeek and Chinese MoE architectures offer lower compute costs, undermining the need for Microsoft's premium-priced Azure services. Microsoft's CapEx surge, driven by AI ...
Microsoft has added DeepSeek's R1 model to both Azure and GitHub, making it readily available to developers. It has also rolled out specially distilled 7B and 14B versions optimized for Copilot+ ...
Both user data and prompts were forwarded from the AI app to a company in Beijing, according to South Korea's data protection ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results