
Pope Leo Speaks at First Vatican Audience to Cardinals
Pope Leo speaks to Cardinals in his first formal audience at the Vatican. He told the cardinals who elected him that he was fully committed to the reforms of the Second Vatican Council and identified AI as a key challenge for humanity. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Should You Buy Nvidia? These Chip Stocks Are Soaring as AI Demand Remains Hot.
Nvidia is a monster chip stock, but it's not capturing the insatiable demand for custom AI accelerators. Broadcom expects demand for its custom AI chips to accelerate through 2026. Taiwan Semiconductor shares offer solid value relative to the company's earnings growth prospects. 10 stocks we like better than Broadcom › Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) continues to dominate the lion's share of the chips going into data centers for artificial intelligence (AI). The company just reported another monster quarter of growth, and the stock is closing in on new all-time highs. There's still a case for buying Nvidia stock, but investors shouldn't put all their chips in one basket (no pun intended). Nvidia is not capturing all the demand for AI semiconductors. Hyperscalers like Alphabet's Google and Amazon are designing custom chips for specific AI workloads in their cloud services, and this is creating tremendous growth for other leading semiconductor companies. Shares of Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM) recently were up 73% and 29%, respectively -- both outperforming Nvidia's 18% return over the last year. These chip stocks can broaden your exposure to the growing demand for AI chips across the data center market. Broadcom is a top supplier of custom AI accelerators (XPUs) and networking solutions for data centers and other markets. Its networking business supplies components that help move data at high speeds, which is vital as hyperscalers shift to more advanced AI workloads. Broadcom has reported five consecutive quarters of 20% or more revenue growth. Specifically, AI-related revenue jumped 46% year over year in the most recent quarter. Broadcom is turning this growth into strong profits, with free cash flow reaching $6.4 billion last quarter, representing a high 43% margin on revenue. AI networking revenue, including Broadcom's Ethernet networking products, grew 170% year over year, representing nearly half of its total revenue from AI. This incredible growth in networking signals a massive ramp in computing power to create the next wave of AI applications and services. Broadcom is also supplying XPUs, which are more cost-efficient for specific workloads than Nvidia's general-purpose chips. Broadcom sees at least three customers deploying 1 million custom AI-accelerated clusters by 2027, and it reported on the last earnings call that these large hyperscalers are "unwavering" in their plans to continue investing in the near term. The long-term outlook for custom chip demand should support shareholder returns over the next several years. In fact, management expects custom XPU demand to accelerate through 2026. The stock isn't cheap, trading at a forward price-to-earnings multiple of 38, but the opportunity could justify the premium. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (also known as TSMC) plays a vital role in the global supply chain for the chip industry. It's the largest chip foundry, with more than 65% market share, according to Counterpoint. It makes chips for several companies, including Nvidia, Broadcom, Advanced Micro Devices, and Apple, as well as hyperscalers. The stock is surging to new highs following a monster quarter, during which revenue in U.S. dollars grew 35% year over year. This strong growth was despite weak smartphone revenue in the quarter, representing over a quarter of the company's revenue, due to seasonal demand trends. TSMC has spent decades investing in cutting-edge chip-making technology to meet customer needs for the world's most advanced chips. Its competitive advantage is based on superior manufacturing capabilities and massive chip-making capacity, enabling it to make more than 16 million 12-inch equivalent wafers annually. These advantages enabled TSMC to earn a sky-high profit margin of 41% on a trailing-12-month basis. TSMC is planning to double its chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) capacity in 2025, indicating growing support for the demand that Nvidia and other customers are experiencing. TSMC recently announced a substantial investment of $165 billion to launch new manufacturing facilities in the U.S., in addition to expansion plans in other geographies. AI accelerator revenue tripled in 2024, and management expects it to double in 2025. Through 2029, the company expects demand for AI chips to grow at an annualized rate topping 40%. Taiwan Semiconductor shares may be the best value among chip stocks right now. The stock trades at just 23 times 2025 earnings estimates, despite analysts expecting 21% annualized earnings growth. While earnings multiples above 20 are historically expensive for chip stocks, these companies are experiencing a once-in-a-generation growth spurt that will likely deliver excellent returns to investors through the end of the decade. Before you buy stock in Broadcom, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Broadcom 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 . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 9, 2025 John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. John Ballard has positions in Advanced Micro Devices and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool recommends Broadcom. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Should You Buy Nvidia? These Chip Stocks Are Soaring as AI Demand Remains Hot. was originally published by The Motley Fool Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Forbes
22 minutes ago
- Forbes
This Indian GenAI Startup Is Reshaping Dubbing and Lip Sync
Co-founders of NeuralGarage after their SXSW win in March 2025. Ever watched a film that felt odd because you watched the dubbed version? The visuals of lip-syncing often do not match what you hear, right? The Indian startup Neural Garage offers a solution that is an AI-powered one and addressees the long-standing problem of "visual discord" in dubbing. In an exclusive interview, Mandar Natekar, Co-founder and CEO, NeuralGarage shares details on the technology - Visual Dub - which fixes lip-sync, and facial expressions for dubbed content. It even works with changes in script. In this exclusive interview, Natekar explains how the technology works by perfectly synchronizing actors' lip movements and facial expressions with the dubbed audio. The attempt creates an authentic and immersive viewing experience, eliminating the visual awkwardness often found in traditional dubbing. Earlier this year, the world's first movie with AI-powered visual dubbing - Swedish sci-fi adventure film Watch the Skies - released in theatres. The Los Angeles-based movie-making AI firm Flawless worked on the visual dub for the English-dubbed version. NeuralGarage's Visual Dub also works on facial expressions and lip movements for dubbed versions without any fresh shoots. Asked about the ways his innovative technology helps enhance the experience of watching dubbed versions of world cinema, Natekar says, 'We've also developed our own voice cloning technology. Let us say, there's a Tom Cruise film that has been dubbed in Hindi. Obviously, Tom Cruise lines will get dubbed by a Hindi dubbing artist - but he does not sound like Tom Cruise. Apart from ensuring that the lip-sync matches the Hindi version, we can even make the Hindi dubbing artist sound like Tom Cruise.' 'With our lip-sync technology and our voice cloning technology, we can actually now make the dubbed content look and sound absolutely natural as if it has been shot and filmed in the language of the audio itself.' SXSW win In March 2025, NeuralGarage created history when they won the SXSW Pitch Competition becoming the first Indian startup to bag the award. NeuralGarage's Visual Dub technology won in "Entertainment, Media, Sports & Content" category. Recalling the moment, Mandar Natekar says, 'SXSW is one of the most prestigious platforms when it comes to entertainment worldwide. This is a platform where people in the business join talent from across the world, including Hollywood. You get to meet people from Paramount, Universal, Warner Brothers, business executives and actors, directors…..all of them come to the festival. This competition highlights some of the best startups in the world that could contribute to the entertainment industry. Winning meant we were judged by a jury that consisted of people in the business and people in the investor ecosystem - very big VCs were presented and that is the kind of intense validation for the technology we built, both in terms of the potential use cases and also in terms of the potential business valuation.' 'Winning the award gives us a lot of credibility. Being in the US makes us more easily marketable - the entire entertainment industry is kind of located here. Now SXSW award gives us instant credibility. We've been getting queries from some of the largest studios in the world and broadcast operations on how we can work together, ever since the awards." Challenges of building NeuralGarage Recalling his early career days, Natekar says, 'As a co-founder of the company - and I have three other co-founders - there are challenges. I spent more than 22 years in the entertainment business in India before co-founding my own. The startup world is totally different from the corporate life. The startup world is completely DIY - you have to do everything yourself. It has been a very interesting adventure - unlike the corporate life where you work to fulfill somebody else's dream, here you have the chance to turn your own dreams into reality and create your own legacy. There are ups and downs, but they are part and parcel of life. Some days you wake up thinking you'll win the world. Some day you go to bed thinking 'Man, is it all worth it?' But then you wake up in the morning and again restart." 'It is all very interesting. It's been four years now since we started up. And in the last one year since we've put our technology out, we've seen massive success and validation. We got selected by AWS and Google in their global accelerators. We got selected by TechCrunch to participate in TechCrunch Battlefield in SF last October. We also won the L'Oreal Big Bang Beauty Tech Innovation Competition, then this win at SXSW recently. Our ambition is to build software in India that can actually create a global brand. And we are on our way there.' A few years ago, right in the middle of raising funds for his startup, Mandar Natekar faces major medical and personal hurdles. He refuses to revisit the time and delve on the hardships, but agrees to share what he learnt from the period of struggle. "I'll tell you my biggest learning - in your life, there are three very strong pillars of any successful person. The first one is obviously your own determination and thought process while the second one is family. The third pillar is health. You have to ensure that all of these pillars are on very, very strong foundation. You have to nurture all of these pillars. If anything goes wrong in any one of these three, it can cause massive upheaval in your life. Suggestions for aspiring tech startups founders 'I tell people to always chase dreams. If you think that you have a compelling idea that can change the world, work on it. And there is no better time to start on anything you want to do than now. Generally, people procrastinate - 'I'll build this after five years' but these plans don't work. If you are passionate about something and have a compelling idea that you want to bring to the world, do it now. There is no better time than this moment. If you base your decision-making on goalposts, you will always be calculating,' Natekar signs off with his bits of suggestions for aspiring founders of tech startups all across. (This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.)


CNET
26 minutes ago
- CNET
What Is Raspberry Pi and How Can I Use It for My Home Internet?
A Raspberry Pi computer can do a little of everything, including keeping you occupied if you need a new project (or distraction). This teeny-tiny computer not only clocks in at a low price, but could potentially help you trim costs by becoming a DIY router. Saving money is appealing: A recent CNET survey showed that internet costs spiked for 63% of US adults last year. When our budgets are tight, having a device that can cover the gamut is appealing, from hosting your home internet to providing a platform for your next gaming experience. What was once a simple tool for teaching students about computers has become a fun tech experience for computer lovers everywhere. Not familiar with a Raspberry Pi computer? Let's take a closer look at these pocket-sized machines. What is a Raspberry Pi computer? Raspberry Pi is a tiny, inexpensive computer about the size of a credit card. It was initially developed in the UK to teach school kids about computer science. As the single-board computer has become more popular over the years, people have used it for various projects. It has evolved into newer, better versions with Bluetooth and Wi-Fi capabilities, and its price has kept falling. Raspberry Pi computers don't have hard drives — they don't have much at all — but this is why they're great starting points for people who want a project. They have ports so you can plug in a monitor and keyboard, as well as a microSD card, and once you've installed an operating system, you can use the Raspberry Pi as a full-fledged desktop computer. The Raspberry Pi 5 is the most recent iteration, with a 16GB model that launched in January. It has a 2.4GHz quad-core 64-bit ARM Cortex-A76 CPU and a VideoCore VII GPU, a significant upgrade from the Pi 4. It's also available in 2GB, 4GB and 8GB, with prices from $50 to $120. The Raspberry Pi Zero is the most minimal model, retailing for only a few dollars. While it can still run many of the same functions as the other Pis, it doesn't run nearly as smoothly (or as quickly) as the ones with more RAM. Locating local internet providers What is Raspberry Pi mostly used for? Raspberry Pi isn't most people's first choice for a desktop computer. You're most likely getting this computer if you want to tinker with it or have another project in mind. However, Raspberry Pi can function as your primary computer. Popular ways people use their Raspberry Pi include as gaming consoles, running their smart devices and as internet routers. In terms of gaming, one option is to configure your Pi for throwback games with RetroPie, an open-source software that works with any Raspberry Pi. You can also link a Raspberry Pi computer with your smart devices to conveniently control your lighting, TVs and more. You can also use it as a router for home internet (more on that later). The uses and capabilities of this tiny computer are endless, and a quick Google search will turn up even more ideas you can do with it. Why would I use a Raspberry Pi computer? Many people use Raspberry Pi computers because they enjoy the thrill of building a computer and like the uniqueness of what Raspberry Pi provides. Truthfully, there is no specific reason to use a Raspberry Pi computer versus any other computer or machine. Various other devices exist in much the same way. It is often about the novelty that this one provides. If you surf through the Raspberry Pi subreddit or the Raspberry Pi Forums — both of which are packed full of Raspberry Pi folks, from novices to pros — you'll find thread after thread of people discussing their Raspberry Pi projects, big and small. Within the discussions, you'll see notes on how they're using the pocket-sized computer, why they're doing it, advice and more. All of this is to say that you'll often use a Raspberry Pi computer because it's fun and a challenge. It was originally created as a teaching tool, and it continues to be a great learning device for anyone who wants to understand more about computers without breaking the bank. Plus, you can do some cool things with them. As you figure out all the uses of your Raspberry Pi, you may want to reward yourself with some raspberry treats. Getty Images Is it safe to use a Raspberry Pi computer? Regarding security issues, a Raspberry Pi computer is relatively safe, though it has risks. Then again, so does any desktop or laptop. Where you run into some trouble with a Raspberry Pi is the Linux operating system it runs on, because it uses a microSD card. That leaves your computer a bit vulnerable (though the open-source Linux is quite solid and many prefer it to any other OS) because someone could simply walk away with the microSD card, as a DZone report points out. You can ensure that your Raspberry Pi is more secure internally and physically by encrypting the device and making it more difficult to steal your information. It's highly recommended that you do this (much like you'd do with any computer to prevent hacking or data breach) but, in general, Raspberry Pi is no more vulnerable than other computers. Can Raspberry Pi help my home internet? Your Raspberry Pi can be used as an internet router on your home network, though admittedly, the Pi is better equipped to handle smaller networks. Some Raspberry Pi users have found more success as a travel router because it functions better as a Wi-Fi tool or hotspot in small use cases. But don't worry, you can still use it at home for your internet. There are a few handy guides to set up your Pi for internet access at home. These will essentially walk you through the process of ensuring your Pi is up to date, has the right software and can bridge between networks. This guide on Medium turns your Raspberry Pi into a Wi-Fi router, and this Raspberry Pi YouTube video shows how to add Ethernet to your Pi. Finally, a Raspberry Pi 5 can also be turned into a Wi-Fi extender using this handy guide. Raspberry Pi FAQ What are popular Raspberry Pi projects? Many people use Raspberry Pi for retro gaming consoles, controlling smart home devices and as a media center. You can also use it as a desktop computer if you install an operating system. Is it safe to use Raspberry Pi? A Raspberry Pi computer operates like any other computer, with an operating system and an internet connection that is as secure as you make it. You are responsible for taking the necessary measures to ensure the security of your information.