
Sundar Pichai tells Google employees to rely more on AI than colleagues to drive productivity
Google is also promoting its internal AI tools, such as Cider — an AI-based coding helper — which, according to Saluzzo, is already used weekly by half of the people who have access to it. He also mentioned 'AI Savvy Google', a website made for Google staff that shares toolkits, lessons and courses to help them learn AI. Google has also teamed up with DeepMind to build a training course called 'Building with Gemini', which will launch soon.This shift in mindset isn't just happening at Google. Other major tech companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Shopify are also expecting workers to use AI more often. The report also mentions that Microsoft's Julia Liuson recently told employees that 'using AI is no longer optional', while Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke said teams need to show that they can't do something with AI before they ask for more people.Meanwhile, Google's total number of employees has slightly gone down from its highest point in 2023. It now has just over 187,000 full-time staff. Pichai admitted that the company's resources are tighter, saying, 'We are going to be going through a period of much higher investment, and I think we have to be frugal with our resources.'- Ends

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Indian Express
4 minutes ago
- Indian Express
US to initially impose ‘small tariff' on pharma imports, Trump says
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Business Standard
4 minutes ago
- Business Standard
OpenAI, Google, Anthropic win US govt approval for civilian AI contracts
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Time of India
33 minutes ago
- Time of India
Donald Trump says will announce new tariff plan for semiconductors and chips next week because: We want them to ...
Donald Trump US President Donald Trump announced that new tariffs on semiconductor and chip imports will be unveiled "within the next week or so," as his administration pursues an aggressive trade policy aimed at bringing manufacturing back to the United States. "We're going to be announcing on semiconductors and chips, which is a separate category, because we want them made in the United States," Trump said during an interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box." The president, however, did not provide specific details about tariff rates or implementation timelines. The announcement comes as the Commerce Department has been investigating the semiconductor market since April to lay the groundwork for possible tariffs on an industry expected to generate nearly $700 billion in global sales, according to Bloomberg. The vast majority of the world's most advanced semiconductors currently come from Taiwan, home to major chipmaker TSMC, whose customers include tech giants Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm and AMD. Trump's recent policy shifts show selective approach The semiconductor tariff announcement follows Trump's recent decision in April to exclude smartphones, computers, and other electronics from higher tariffs, though other existing duties remain in place. US Customs and Border Protection updated its guidance to exempt various tech products from the 125% additional tariff on Chinese goods and the base 10% global tariff. Despite Trump's claims that "people love the tariffs," his approval rating has declined in multiple poll trackers' latest updates, per CNBC. Historical data, as quoted in the CNBC report, shows that the president's first-term trade war with China actually expanded China's trade surplus with the US between 2018 and 2021, according to industry reports. Trump had sharply criticized the Biden administration's $52 billion CHIPS Act subsidies as "ridiculous," arguing that tariff threats provide superior incentives for domestic manufacturing. "We will have more plants built in the next short period of time than ever before because the incentive will be there," Trump stated at a House GOP conference earlier this year in January, though he provided no specific timelines for these projected developments. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now