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Toyota and its affiliated suppliers plan to reduce their shareholdings in electric parts maker Denso Corp., with Toyota intending to lower its stake from 24% to 20%. This move is aimed at generating approximately USD$1.9 billion to fund the companies' shift to electric vehicles. Denso will conduct a share buyback of up to $1.3 billion worth of its own shares.
Toyota is freeing up funds to support their transition to electric vehicles, as the company aims to roll out 10 new battery-powered EVs and sell 1.5 million units annually by 2026. This move is part of Toyota's broader strategy to compete in the ever-increasing EV market.
Toyota’s revised strategy and technological advancements makes them a formidable contender against EV competitors like Tesla, Volkswagen, and General Motors. This aligns with their $13.9 billion EV Battery factory investment in North Carolina.
Japanese companies, including Toyota, have been facing pressure to reduce or eliminate cross shareholdings. Toyota previously announced the sale of some of its stake in telecommunications company KDDI Corp. for $2.3 billion.
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Extropic, a hardware startup founded by former Alphabet quantum research team members, has secured $14.1 million in seed funding. Extropic is reportedly developing a chip optimized for running LLMs. The technology is described as a "novel full-stack paradigm of physics-based computing" that incorporates concepts from non-equilibrium thermodynamics, hinting at a unique approach to chip design.
Traditional computing models are constrained by physical and complexity limitations. Extropic's breakthrough aims to build a system where computing errors or noise, which has been a significant challenge in quantum computing, are considered an asset rather than a liability. The company has not disclosed detailed technical information but indicated a goal to reduce the electricity required for running AI models and automate certain coding tasks, potentially allowing the computer to self-program for learning representations of the world.
Extropic is advancing the development of their physics-based computing model, which could automate coding tasks and enhance processing of LLMs, potentially leading to major improvements in AI applications.
Contrary to its founders' background in quantum computing, Extropic's product is not a quantum computing chip. The decision is attributed to the scalability challenges of quantum physics-based computers and the company's pursuit of a different path to practical physics-based computing.
This development challenges Nvidia's dominance in AI hardware, especially with its H200 data center processor. Extropic's approach, utilizing physics-based computing, offers a compelling alternative in the competitive AI chip industry.
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Pika, a startup specializing in AI-powered video editing and generation, has secured $55 million in a funding round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners. This funding comes six months after Pika emerged from stealth mode and coincides with the launch of "Pika 1.0," a suite of videography tools introducing a generative AI model capable of editing videos in various styles.
Pika's rapid growth reflects the strong demand for generative AI. IDC projects a significant increase in generative AI investments from $16 billion in 2023 to $143 billion in 2027. The company claims to have onboarded over 500,000 users in half a year, generating millions of videos each week. Their goal is to make video creation accessible and empowering for the masses.
Challenges persist for enterprise customers, including concerns about unexpected outcomes, security, safety, fairness, bias, privacy, and the difficulty of finding suitable business use cases. Ongoing hurdles may impede the broader deployment of generative AI in corporate settings.
“We know firsthand that making high-quality content is difficult and expensive, and we built Pika to give everyone, from home users to film professionals, the tools to bring high-quality video to life,” said Demi Guo, Pika co-founder and CEO. “Our vision is to enable anyone to be the director of their stories and to bring out the creator in all of us.”
Pika faces competition from other generative AI video tools like Runway and Stability AI. Pika aims to differentiate itself through innovative features, and despite competition from tech giants like Google and Meta, Lightspeed Venture Partners expresses confidence in Pika's potential impact on democratizing professional-quality video creation.
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