computers
Microsoft’s total carbon emissions have risen by almost 30 per cent since 2020, according to the company’s annual Environmental Sustainability Report released on Wednesday. While its direct emissions and energy use dropped by more than 6 per cent, its indirect emissions set it back. With the company being a cloud supplier, the construction of more data centres was the main cause. Microsoft highlighted the need for collaboration across industries to develop and use greener building materials, like concrete and steel, and hardware components, like chips, to help reach its goal of becoming carbon...
Euronews (English)
In a move that that some may view as going against the current tide, British computer company Raspberry Pi has revealed that it would be listing on the UK stock market, as opposed to New York. This move follows the hobbyist computer company seeing revenues surge by about 42% in 2023, touching approximately $265.8 million (€244.4 million), with an addressable market of about $21.2 billion. Raspberry Pi, a subsidiary of the Raspberry Pi Foundation produces single-board computers, semiconductors, complementary accessories and compute models, amongst other things, for a variety of functions. These...
Euronews (English)
British chip designer ARM has announced its earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter, which greatly surpassed analyst estimates, due to robust demand for AI chips. However, its shares plummeted by 9% in after-trading hours following a weaker-than-expected annual revenue forecast for the full year of 2024. This has raised concerns about whether the growth prospects of the tech firm can justify its hefty valuation. Arm dominates the chip architecture market, with 99% of smartphones using its platform worldwide. The AI chip leader, Nvidia, attempted to acquire Arm in 2022, but the offer encountered...
Euronews (English)
Researchers have developed a computer game to help students better spot fake news, according to a study. Their experiment involved 516 Swedish upper secondary school students from four different institutions. The game, called Bad News, was created through a collaboration between researchers from the University of Cambridge and video game studios. In Bad News, the user plays “the role of fake news-monger” to get people accustomed to manipulation techniques used to mislead an audience. The game breaks down six practices commonly levered in misinformation: impersonation, emotion, polarisation, co...
Euronews (English)
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