Watch out, Google! Chinese Baidu just got a massive AI update
Baidu named its new AI tool MuseSteamer. This new AI tool can generate videos up to 10 seconds long from still images. Baidu has released three versions: Turbo, Pro, and Lite, which likely offer different balances between speed, video quality, and computing needs. Unlike OpenAI's Sora, which targets general consumers, MuseSteamer is designed specifically for businesses. Baidu has not yet released a version for individual creators or the public. The tool aims to support industries such as digital marketing, gaming, e-commerce, and content creation, where short videos play a role in advertising, demonstrations, or early-stage creative work.
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By automating video production, Baidu expects MuseSteamer to reduce costs and speed up content creation for Chinese companies. While the company has not shared pricing or technical details about its cloud services, this launch marks Baidu's push into the enterprise AI sector, where demand for multimedia tools is growing rapidly.
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Alongside MuseSteamer, Baidu has revamped its main search engine. The updated platform now accepts long text queries, voice commands, and image searches. This change reflects a global trend toward multimodal search engines that process various input types to improve results. The search engine uses Baidu's AI models to interpret user intent more accurately, which offers more context-aware and personalised answers. This upgrade has been developed to meet the growing demands of users who expect a natural and conversational search experience. Mobile finder: iPhone 16 LATEST price, specs and all details

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Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Houthis spare Chinese car ships, but others aren't so lucky - here's the surprising reason
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India.com
2 hours ago
- India.com
Oil, Tariffs And A Tightrope: Is India Risking US Ties To Keep Russia Close?
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Economic Times
2 hours ago
- Economic Times
Trump vs CEOs: Elon Musk, Apple's Tim Cook to Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon - Full list of prominent Corporate executives whom Donald Trump has publicly blasted
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ELON MUSK, CEO, TESLA The billionaire tech CEO spent hundreds of millions of dollars supporting Trump's re-election, a move investors who bid up Tesla stock expected to benefit Musk's and Musk, however, had a falling out early in June after Musk criticized Trump's sweeping tax-cut and spending bill, because it is projected to increase federal responded to Musk's attack on Truth Social, threatening to cut federal subsidies and contracts to Musk's companies and saying the billionaire "just went CRAZY" after losing the EV mandate in the early July, Trump messaged, "Perhaps we should have DOGE take a good, hard, look at (Musk's contracts)?" Days later, Musk announced the formation of a centrist America Party. The President responded to Musk's move, calling him a "train wreck." ADRIAN MARDELL, FORMER CEO, JAGUAR LAND ROVER Trump criticized Jaguar's rebranding effort in August, calling the campaign "woke" and "stupid," and linking it to the departure of the company's remarks from Trump came as the British carmaker, now owned by India's Tata Motors, announced the retirement of CEO Adrian Mardell, who spent more than three decades at the last year unveiled a new logo and visual identity as part of a broader brand refresh aimed at repositioning itself as an all-electric automaker, a move that drew sharp online backlash and criticism from brand loyalists. 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Apple is already reeling from Trump's tariff war, warning that tariffs would add $1.1 billion in costs in the July-September quarter after costing the company $800 million in the June this week, though, Trump announced Apple would invest an additional $100 billion in the U.S., raising Apple's total domestic commitment to $600 billion over the next four years. Cook also gave Trump a U.S.-made souvenir with a 24-karat gold base. JEFF BEZOS, CEO, Trump called Bezos in April to complain about a news report that said the company planned to display prices showing tariffs' impact on ecommerce giant However, Amazon said it had only briefly considered listing import charges for some goods in April following Trump's tariff announcement but dropped the plan as the White House accused the company of a "hostile political act." Trump later told reporters that Bezos had solved the problem "very quickly" and was "very nice." BRIAN MOYNIHAN, CEO, BANK OF AMERICA JAMIE DIMON, CEO, JPMORGAN CHASE Trump alleged BofA CEO Brian Moynihan and JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon discriminated against him and his supporters. In January, Trump accused both Moynihan and Dimon of not providing banking services to conservatives, echoing Republican complaints about the industry."What you're doing is wrong," Trump said, in a video address at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Trump did not cite evidence or specifics of any wrongdoing, in a question-and-answer session with corporate leaders and CEOs assembled on also referenced JPMorgan's Dimon. "You and Jamie and everybody, I hope you're gonna open your bank to conservatives." Trump said in an interview with CNBC earlier in August, "When I called him (Moynihan) after I was president to deposit a billion dollars plus and a lot of other things, more importantly, to open accounts, he said, 'We can't do it. No, we can't do it.'" 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