š Ready for robots

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A new Wegovy competitor, in the form of a pill not an injection, can cut an average 6% of a patientās weight in just 12 weeks. Structure Therapeuticsā GSBR-1290 is still in the experimental stage, but its stock jumped more than 50% Monday on news of early trial results.
Paramount Global has reportedly reached an $8 billion deal to be acquired by Skydance Media, the film studio owned by Oracle founder Larry Ellisonās son David. RedBird Capital and KKR are partnering with Skydance. Next comes approval from Shari Redstone, chief of Paramountās majority owner National Amusements.
Sam Altmanās secret investment stash may be a massive conflict of interest, with holdings worth $2.8 billion. Some of the companies in those holdings, such as Reddit, have lucrative deals with Altmanās own OpenAI.
Hertz says it will replace its CFO with the outgoing finance chief of troubled Spirit Airlines, as the car rental company struggles with a $440 million loss from its bet on a fleet of Teslas that renters couldnāt figure out how to drive.
Dr. Pepper is proud and loud in second place. That original craze has pushed the peppery cherry cola to a tie with Pepsi as Americaās No. 2-selling soft drink brand ā right behind, of course, Coke. Cāmon, be a Pepper!
A trading software glitch temporarily cratered stock in Warren Buffettās Berkshire Hathaway, sending its Class A shares down 97%. Trading was halted but later resumed.
Nvidiaās Jensen Huang says AIās next wave is physical
Speaking ahead of COMPUTEX, an annual tech trade show in Taiwan, the Nvidia CEO said AI wonāt be staying put in our phones and desktops. We are going to see āAI that understands the laws of physics, AI that can work among us.ā
He means robots: āRobotics is here,ā Huang said. āPhysical AI is here. This is not science fiction, and itās being used all over Taiwan. Itās just really, really exciting.ā
Nvidiaās Isaac AI robot development platform is already being used to improve efficiency in factories and warehouses, and for research, development, and production of ātens of millionsā of AI-powered autonomous machines and robots, including industrial arms and humanoids
GMās self-driving cars are backā with drivers
Cruise, General Motorsā self-driving car subsidiary, officially resumed manual driving of its vehicles in Dallas to create maps and gather road information. The data will train Cruiseās driverless systems and allow it to return to autonomous driving.
Itās called āsupervised autonomous driving,ā meaning the cars drive themselves with a human ready and able to take the wheel if necessary.
Cruise was forced to suspend operations last October after one of its driverless cars dragged a pedestrian for roughly 20 feet after a separate, human-operated car hit them. The incident led to the revocation of its license to operate in California, a recall of its fleet, layoffs, and the departure of several executives.
Thereās a lot at stake here for GM. Before the October incident, CEO Mary Barra said Cruise could generate $50 billion annually by 2030.
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