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+7 +1
IBM will pay $24.25 million to resolve FCC probes
IBM Corp has agreed to pay $24.25 million to resolve a pair of investigations by the Federal Communications Commission(FCC) over subsidies awarded to connect schools and libraries to broadband. IBM’s payment will resolve two FCC investigations that have spanned nearly 15 years over its alleged violations of “E-Rate” program rules in connection with New York City and El Paso school districts.
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+27 +1
IBM algorithm can tell who's going to get Alzheimer's by reading their writing
"Given a large volume of spoken or written speech, can you tease out a signal?"
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+23 +1
IBM Creates First 2nm Chip
Every decade is the decade that tests the limits of Moore’s Law, and this decade is no different. With the arrival of Extreme Ultra Violet (EUV) technology, the intricacies of multipatterning techniques developed on previous technology nodes can now be applied with the finer resolution that EUV provides. That, along with other more technical improvements, can lead to a decrease in transistor size, enabling the future of semiconductors. To that end, Today IBM is announcing it has created the world’s first 2 nanometer node chip.
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+18 +1
IBM just solved this quantum computing problem 120 times faster than previously possible
Big Blue has now released Qiskit Runtime, which enables a significant acceleration of quantum calculations carried out over the cloud.
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+22 +1
IBM-powered Mayflower autonomous ship set to sail itself across Atlantic
An autonomous ship fitted with software developed by IBM is getting ready to sail across the Atlantic Ocean in the weeks ahead, according to the BBC. The Mayflower Autonomous Ship, which was completed and launched in September, is an artificial intelligence, solar-powered marine research vessel that will sail across oceans to collect environmental data. The ship commemorates the crossing of the original Mayflower 400 years ago.
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+21 +1
IBM tries to sell Watson Health again
Big Blue hopes to fetch more than $1 billion, but spent over $4 billion to build the unit.
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+15 +1
IBM executives called older workers 'dinobabies' who should be 'extinct' in internal emails released in age discrimination lawsuit
Internal emails released in a discrimination lawsuit on Friday show IBM's plans "to oust older employees from its workforce," the plaintiff alleged.
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+13 +1
Nvidia and IBM have a plan to connect GPUs straight to SSDs
Nvidia, IBM, and researchers have a plan to make the lives of those working in machine learning a bit easier: connecting GPUs directly to SSDs. Detailed in a research paper, the idea is called Big accelerator Memory (BaM) and involves connecting GPUs directly to large amounts of SSD storage, helping unwind a bottleneck for ML training and other intensive tasks.
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+24 +1
IBM accelerates quantum computing with 433-qubit processor, eyes even more power
With conventional computing silicon, computing performance is often a function of clock speed and thread processing capabilities. For quantum computing, to date, the qubit has been the defining metric and it’s a number that keeps getting bigger. A year ago, IBM announced that it had developed a127-qubit processor codenamed Eagle. Today at the IBM Quantum 2022 Summit, Big Blue announced a four- fold increase with its new Osprey Quantum processor, which can deliver 433 qubits.
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+12 +1
IBM chief says employees' careers could suffer and promotions may be harder to achieve if they work from home
IBM's CEO, Arvind Krishna, says employees' careers could suffer if they work from home. Krishna told Bloomberg during a Monday interview that although he wasn't forcing his own staffers back to the office, he thought remote workers may struggle to get promotions.
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