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Google DeepMind builds AI model to predict cyclones; Foxconn sends 97% of India iPhone exports to U.S; AMD unveils AI server

Google DeepMind builds AI model to predict cyclones; Foxconn sends 97% of India iPhone exports to U.S; AMD unveils AI server

The Hindu2 days ago

Google DeepMind builds AI model to predict cyclones
Google DeepMind and Google Research have launched a new website called Weather Lab that shares their AI weather models today. The model is able to predict cyclone formations, their route, intensity, size and shape up to 15 days ahead, Google said in a blog. The experimental AI model can also generate 50 different scenarios for the storm.
The research teams have also released a new paper with details of the core along with an archive on Weather Lab of historical cyclone track data, evaluation and backtesting. Google also added that during internal testing they found that the model's predictions were as accurate and often more accurate than current physics-based methods, they have also partnered with the U.S. National Hurricance Center (NHC) to evaluate further how effective the model is. The Weather Lab website also shows a comparison between how AI models perform and how the traditional models perform.
Foxconn sends 97% of India iPhone exports to U.S
Nearly all the iPhones exported by Foxconn from India went to the United States between March and May, customs data showed, far above the 2024 average of 50% and a clear sign of Apple's efforts to bypass high U.S. tariffs imposed on China. The numbers, being reported by Reuters for the first time, show Apple has realigned its India exports to almost exclusively serve the U.S. market, when previously the devices were more widely distributed to countries including the Netherlands, the Czech Republic and Britain.
During March-May, Foxconn exported iPhones worth $3.2 billion from India, with an average 97% shipped to the United States, compared to a 2024 average of 50.3%, according to commercially available customs data seen by Reuters. India iPhone shipments by Foxconn to the United States in May 2025 were worth nearly $1 billion, the second-highest ever after the record $1.3 billion worth of devices shipped in March.
AMD unveils AI server
Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su on Thursday unveiled a new AI server for 2026 that aims to challenge Nvidia's flagship offerings as OpenAI's CEO said the ChatGPT creator would adopt AMD's latest chips. Su took the stage at a developer conference in California, called 'Advancing AI' to discuss the MI350 series and MI400 series AI chips that she said would compete with Nvidia's Blackwell line of processors.
The MI400 series of chips will be the basis of a new server called 'Helios' that AMD plans to release next year. The move comes as the competition between Nvidia and other AI chip firms has shifted away from selling individual chips to selling servers packed with scores or even hundreds of processors, woven together with networking chips from the same company. The AMD Helios servers will have 72 of AMD's MI400 series chips, making them comparable to Nvidia's current NVL72 servers.

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Bhavish Aggarwal's Krutrim bets on India-first AI to rival global peers
Bhavish Aggarwal's Krutrim bets on India-first AI to rival global peers

Business Standard

time14 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Bhavish Aggarwal's Krutrim bets on India-first AI to rival global peers

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Nearly 7,000 UK University Students Caught Cheating Using AI: Report
Nearly 7,000 UK University Students Caught Cheating Using AI: Report

NDTV

timean hour ago

  • NDTV

Nearly 7,000 UK University Students Caught Cheating Using AI: Report

Nearly 7,000 university students in the UK were caught cheating using ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence tools during the 2023-24 academic year, according to data obtained by The Guardian. As part of the investigation, the British newspaper contacted 155 universities under the Freedom of Information Act. Of those, 131 institutions responded. The latest figures show 5.1 confirmed cases of AI-related cheating for every 1,000 students, a rise from 1.6 per 1,000 the previous year. Early projections for the current academic cycle suggest the number could climb even higher to 7.5 per 1,000 students. The growing reliance on AI tools like ChatGPT is proving to be a major challenge for higher education institutions. At the same time, cases of traditional plagiarism have dropped. From 19 per 1,000 students in 2019-20 to 15.2 last year, the number has gone down and is expected to fall further to 8.5 per 1,000. Experts warn that the recorded cases may be only scratching the surface. "I would imagine those caught represent the tip of the iceberg," said Dr Peter Scarfe, associate professor of psychology at the University of Reading. "AI detection is very unlike plagiarism, where you can confirm the copied text. As a result, in a situation where you suspect the use of AI, it is near impossible to prove, regardless of the percentage AI that your AI detector says (if you use one). This is coupled with not wanting to falsely accuse students." Evidence suggests AI misuse is far more widespread than reported. A February survey by the Higher Education Policy Institute found that 88 per cent of students admitted to using AI for assessments. Researchers at the University of Reading tested their own systems last year and found AI-generated submissions went undetected 94 per cent of the time. Online platforms are making it easier. The report found dozens of videos on TikTok promoting AI paraphrasing and essay-writing tools that help students bypass standard university detectors by "humanising" ChatGPT-generated content. Dr Thomas Lancaster, an academic integrity researcher at Imperial College London, said, "When used well and by a student who knows how to edit the output, AI misuse is very hard to prove. My hope is that students are still learning through this process." Science and technology secretary Peter Kyle told The Guardian that AI should be used to "level up" opportunities for dyslexic children. Tech giants are already targeting students as key users. Google offers university students a free 15-month upgrade to its Gemini AI tool, while OpenAI provides discounted access to students in the US and Canada.

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