Google app starts rolling out quick access to AI Mode history
Google is quietly reshaping how users interact with its AI by making it easier to revisit past conversations, a seemingly small feature that could fundamentally change the way people treat artificial intelligence—moving it from a disposable search tool to a persistent digital memory they'll rely on repeatedly. The rollout, spreading across Google's ecosystem, suggests the company is betting that users will engage more deeply with AI if they can build on previous chats rather than starting fresh each time. If adoption patterns follow, this could upend how billions of people research, problem-solve, and create, while raising fresh questions about what Google knows and remembers about its users' private thoughts and queries.

NVIDIA Just Released a 120B Model That Runs Like a 12B
by Gowtham Boyina — And the Architecture Behind It Is Genuinely Weird

How NVIDIA Dynamo 1.0 Powers Multi-Node Inference at Production Scale
Reasoning models are growing rapidly in size and are increasingly being integrated into agentic AI workflows that interact with other models and external tools.... Reasoning models are growing...

NVIDIA Vera CPU Delivers High Performance, Bandwidth, and Efficiency for AI Factories
AI is evolving, and reasoning models are increasing token demand, placing new requirements on every layer of AI infrastructure. More than ever, compute must... AI is evolving, and reasoning models...

Yahoo CEO Jim Lanzone on reviving the web’s homepage
Today, I’m talking with Jim Lanzone, who is the CEO of Yahoo. It’s basically impossible to sum up the Yahoo story, but the short version of it is that a long time ago Yahoo paid Google to run the...







