This week's announcement by President Donald Trump of a massive private-sector investment to build more AI data centers casts a spotlight on a relatively small and nimble class of cloud computing firms positioned to play a bigger role in the tech sector.
Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance is planning to build what could become the world’s largest data center in Jamnagar, India, with a capacity of 3 gigawatts to capitalize on surging AI demand.
Zuckerberg expects Meta’s AI assistant — available across its services, including Facebook and Instagram — to serve more than 1 billion people in 2025.
The artificial intelligence (AI) revolution is firmly upon us, and investors everywhere are scrambling to gain exposure to companies heavily involved in the space. Of course, it’s possible to invest in the companies that are directly involved in the production of AI applications and the technologies consumers use.
Investors aren't getting a whole lot of extra compensation on highly rated corporate bonds these days with spreads near historic lows. But securitized products, a catch-all for bonds that finance aircraft,
Uptime Institute predicts the data center industry in 2025 will face pressure over resource consumption, grid integration challenges, and AI infrastructure requirements.
OpenAI has announced that it's teaming up with Softbank and Oracle on $100 billion data center project in the U.S.
India could soon host the world's biggest data center by capacity through Reliance Group under billionaire Mukesh Ambani's leadership. This comes as part of
OpenAI and Japanese conglomerate SoftBank will each commit $19 billion to fund Stargate, a joint venture to develop data centers for artificial intelligence in the U.S., the Information reported on Wednesday.
To bring Meta to Louisiana, officials rewrote laws and pushed through big tax breaks in record time. The inside story, from the people who made it happen.