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How to follow the Amazon's Alexa event today

How to follow the Amazon's Alexa event today

Yahoo26-02-2025

It's sort of out of character for Amazon to be hosting a devices event in February, as opposed to its usual Fall launch. But this morning (February 26) at 10am ET, the company is holding a presentation in New York City. As it's done in the past, Amazon won't be livestreaming this event, and you won't be able to watch Panos Panay and his colleagues present to members of the media. Don't worry about FOMO, though. Engadget will be attending and liveblogging the event, so if you follow our updates it'll almost feel like you're right there with us!
We'll have commentary and contextualization on the announcements, as well as the in-person vibes and quality of snacks. Our Sam Rutherford will be sharing pictures, too, so you won't miss a thing. Scroll down to see what we've posted so far, and keep this page open all day for the latest updates! I recommend having drinks or snacks handy while you follow along with us.
To whet your appetite, here's our writer Lawrence Bonk's roundup of what we've learned from reports and rumors about what Amazon might announce today. In short, "Alexa is likely to get most of the attention, while new Echo devices may accompany it."
Read more: Amazon is holding a devices event on February 26, here's what to expect
We don't know much about what to expect out of today's event, other than some kind of Alexa update. The company's been teasing its next-gen Assistant for awhile now, promising that it can conduct more natural conversations and executive more complex tasks than the existing version. It will certainly be a welcome improvement if that happens to be true.
Hello everyone and welcome to our liveblog of Amazon's devices event. We're so pleased you're here with us today. The company will be properly kicking things off at 10am ET, and at that time you'll find our senior reporters Jeff Dunn and Sam Rutherford joining me on this liveblog. Jeff will be bringing you most of the text while Sam will be adding photos to our coverage. I'm helping too, I promise.
Amazon is hosting an Alexa-themed event on February 26. Check out what we expect Amazon to announce, and come back to catch up on all the news from the company's showcase.

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PA's community colleges key as NEPA becoming target zone for data centers
PA's community colleges key as NEPA becoming target zone for data centers

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

PA's community colleges key as NEPA becoming target zone for data centers

Jun. 14—John Yudichak, President of Luzerne County Community College, said this week that for the past decade, Pennsylvania lost economic ground to states like Virginia. He said Virginia used creative economic incentives that built the largest data center market in the world that sustains 74,000 jobs and contributes $9.1 billion to the GDP of that state's economy. "It is not lost on me that Luzerne County, which played a central role in the industrial revolution with the production of coal, now stands to be a prominent player in the technological revolution as the epicenter of hyper-scale data center development that will fuel American dominance in artificial intelligence technologies," Yudichak said. On Monday, June 9, Gov. Josh Shapiro announced that Amazon is planning to invest $20 billion to establish multiple high-tech cloud computing and artificial intelligence innovation campuses across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The governor said Amazon's investment will create at least 1,250 high-paying, high-tech jobs. The first communities identified as sites for these future campuses are Salem Township, Luzerne County, and Falls Township, Bucks County. Several additional Pennsylvania communities are under consideration for data center development. NEPA becomes target zone for data centers John Augustine, President/CEO at Penn's Northeast, said the close proximity of natural gas through the Marcellus Shale and the reliable and robust infrastructure of our utilities make our region one of the top spots in the United States. Since Monday's announcement by the governor, Augustine said he has received a half dozen calls from companies interested in locating data centers in NEPA. "This is in addition, to the four that we are working with in Lackawanna County, three more in Luzerne County and another in Schuylkill County," Augustine said. Augustine said for every $26 dollars of tax revenue that a data center generates, they spend a $1 on servicing the center. He said each campus is providing millions of dollars in local and state revenue along with thousands of construction jobs and hundreds of high-tech, high-paying positions. "The hyper-scale facility in Salem Township alone is a $10 billion dollar investment," Augustine said. "Besides ongoing manufacturing, we are seeing the third wave of industrial development in Northeastern PA — coal, warehousing/distribution facilities and now data centers. Our region is poised to be a leader in the race for artificial intelligence infrastructure. This is a generational opportunity to provide huge tax revenue and high paying jobs for our residents." Community colleges performing critical role Bucks County Community College President & CEO Dr. Patrick Jones spoke at the Amazon announcement, stressing a vision as more hyper-scale data centers are planned. "Through a unique, consortium approach, we will be able to better focus on the needs of data centers and help ensure students are prepared with the knowledge and skills required for this unique sector," Jones said. "We will collaborate to determine industry needs and share expertise and resources so that no matter where someone lives, one of our colleges will be able to help them attain the skills they need for success in this growing industry." Under the lead of the Pennsylvania Commission for Community Colleges (PACCC), Luzerne County Community College, Lehigh Carbon Community College, Northampton Community College and Bucks County Community College are joining forces to partner on a Technology and Trades Workforce Consortium in an expanded Northeast Region of Pennsylvania. The PACCC collaboration will bring together these four community colleges to address workforce needs during the construction of hyper-scale data centers and the jobs needed once they are built. As more hyper-scale data centers are constructed, other community colleges across the Commonwealth will join to expand the ADVANCEPA Technology & Trade Workforce Consortium. Technology and Trades Workforce Consortium Yudichak said there is no sector of higher education better equipped to adeptly respond to the changing workforce development demands of the technological revolution that is driving historic economic growth than Pennsylvania's community colleges. He said the three pillars planned by the Technology and Trades Workforce Consortium are: Career & Technology Academy An innovative regional partnership formed by community colleges and career and technical center high schools to create new pathways for career and technical center students to earn post-secondary credentials in technology and the skilled construction trades. The goal of a Career & Technology Academy is to serve under-served student populations in career and technical center high schools to build a consistent workforce pipeline of entry level technicians and skilled trade workers. MicroCredential Academy The MicroCredential Academy will rapidly develop post-secondary credential programming that makes upskilling career credentials for Pennsylvania workers efficient, cost-effective, and accessible. The goal of the MicroCredential Academy is to serve Pennsylvania workers where they live and work by identifying high demand industry clusters and providing online, mobile, and campus based microcrendential programming that empowers workers to advance to a high wage, high demand career. 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As the former state senator and chairman of the Pennsylvania State Senate Community, Economic and Recreational Development Committee, Yudichak said he worked on the passage of Act 25 of 2021 that established data center tax exemption to serve as a economic incentive to attract data center development to Pennsylvania. He said as president of LCCC, he is honored to be working with the Pennsylvania State Board of Higher Education, the Shapiro Administration's Department of Community & Economic Development, and the Pennsylvania Commission on Community Colleges to establish a historic workforce development partnership through the new Technology & Trades Workforce Consortium. "This will be the central workforce development pipeline to supply thousands of new technology and skilled trade workers to meet the demand of Pennsylvania's 21st century economy," Yudichak said. Reach Bill O'Boyle at 570-991-6118 or on Twitter @TLBillOBoyle.

2 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks That Could Dominate the Rest of 2025
2 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks That Could Dominate the Rest of 2025

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time9 hours ago

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2 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks That Could Dominate the Rest of 2025

Advanced Micro Devices has reported three consecutive quarters of accelerating revenue growth, and the stock is starting to respond. Amazon has a monster opportunity in robotics that isn't reflected in its current valuation. 10 stocks we like better than Advanced Micro Devices › As long-term investors, it's most important to focus on where a company will be in 10 years and invest accordingly. But it's also beneficial to find growth stocks benefiting from catalysts that could send their shares higher in the near term. After falling earlier this year, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) are starting to see their share prices rise. AMD is a leader in supplying artificial intelligence (AI) chips to data centers, while Amazon is benefiting enormously from its increasing use of robotics in its fulfillment centers. Here's what's driving these stocks higher and why they have room to run. Shares of AMD have soared 61% since hitting a 52-week low of $76.48 in April. The company reported its third consecutive quarter of accelerating revenue growth as it prepares to launch new versions of its MI300 series of graphics processing units (GPUs) for data centers. AMD is building momentum. It recently announced an agreement with Saudi Arabia's new AI enterprise HUMAIN to build cost-efficient computing systems using AMD chips to power advanced AI workloads for enterprises, start-ups, and governments. This news comes as AMD is set to launch its MI350 GPU. Its first data center GPU debuted in 2023: the MI300 chip, which raked in $5 billion of revenue last year. The MI350 promises 35 times more throughput and performance than the MI300x, and management said on the first-quarter earnings call that customer interest is "very strong." Oracle is already in line to deploy a large-scale cluster powered by MI355x accelerators for AI workloads. 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As Wall Street continues to pay attention to Amazon's opportunity in robotics, the stock could climb higher. Before you buy stock in Advanced Micro Devices, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Advanced Micro Devices wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $655,255!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $888,780!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 999% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 174% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . 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