
Tesla Cybertruck has a bad rap. So she gave hers a peach of a wrap
'I grew up in a single-parent, low-income home, and I didn't even know what a Lamborghini or Bentley was. I wasn't into cars.
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CTV News
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SpaceX agrees to take Italian experiments to Mars
Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX, introduces the SpaceX Dragon V2 spaceship at the rocket company's headquarters. (Jae C. Hong / AP Photo) WASHINGTON - Elon Musk's SpaceX has agreed to carry Italian experiments on its Starship megarocket during planned future missions to Mars, according to a new deal announced on Thursday. 'Italy is going to Mars!' Italian Space Agency president Teodoro Valente said on X, adding that the scientific experiments would fly on the first Starship trips to the red planet that have customers. Musk dreams of colonizing Mars using Starship, however the massive rocket has suffered several setbacks after recent tests ended in spectacular explosions. Still, the world's richest man - who is known for his aggressively optimistic timelines - maintains that the first Starship launches will take place next year. SpaceX president Gwynne Shotwell also announced the 'first-of-its-kind' deal with the Italian Space Agency, saying that there was 'more to come.' 'Get on board! We are going to Mars! SpaceX is now offering Starship services to the red planet,' she posted on X, formerly Twitter. Musk - the world's richest man and a former close advisor to U.S. President Donald Trump - has cultivated close ties with Italy's hard-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. A proposed cybersecurity deal between the Italian government and Musk's satellite company Starlink was heavily criticized by opposition parties in Italy earlier this year. In June, a SpaceX Starship rocket exploded during a routine ground test, resulting in the complete loss of the vessel. Standing 403 feet (123 metres) tall, Starship is the world's largest and most powerful rocket and is billed as a fully reusable rocket with a payload capacity of up to 150 metric tons.


Toronto Star
a day ago
- Toronto Star
Is this the shape of excitement? Lamborghini thinks so
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Winnipeg Free Press
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OpenAI releases GPT-5, a potential barometer for whether artificial intelligence hype is justified
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — OpenAI has released the fifth generation of the artificial intelligence technology that powers ChatGPT, a product update that's being closely watched as a measure of whether generative AI is advancing rapidly or hitting a plateau. GPT-5 arrives more than two years after the March 2023 release of GPT-4, bookending a period of intense commercial investment, hype and worry over AI's capabilities. In anticipation, rival Anthropic released the latest version of its own chatbot, Claude, earlier in the week. Expectations are high for the newest version of OpenAI's flagship model because the San Francisco company has long positioned its technical advancements as a path toward artificial general intelligence, or AGI, a technology that is supposed to surpass humans at economically valuable work. It is also trying to raise huge amounts of money to get there, in part to pay for the costly computer chips and data centers needed to build and run the technology. OpenAI started in 2015 as a nonprofit research laboratory to safely build AGI and has since incorporated a for-profit company with a valuation that has grown to $300 billion. The company has tried to change its structure since the nonprofit board ousted its CEO Sam Altman in Nov. 2023. He was reinstated days later and continues to lead OpenAI. It has run into hurdles escaping its nonprofit roots, including scrutiny from the attorneys general in California and Delaware, who have oversight of nonprofits, and a lawsuit by Elon Musk, an early donor to and founder of OpenAI. Most recently, OpenAI has said it will turn its for-profit company into a public benefit corporation, which must balance the interests of shareholders and its mission.