Previous close | 0.8600 |
Open | 0.7500 |
Bid | 0.6200 |
Ask | 0.6300 |
Strike | 170.00 |
Expiry date | 2024-07-19 |
Day's range | 0.6100 - 0.8300 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | 16.89k |
Google took back the AI crown during its I/O developer conference, but its reign could be short-lived.
Users with physical disabilities will now be able to control their iPhone or iPad using eye movements.
“You could almost argue that the smartphone is becoming a little bit closer to a washing machine than the cutting-edge, rapidly changing device category that it used to be,” says Ben Wood, chief analyst at CCS Insight, a technology research firm. Samsung Electronics and Alphabet Google, which have spent years partnering on mobile phones—and the Android software that powers them—see a silver bullet in the form of artificial intelligence. “This new era of AI is a profound opportunity to make smartphones truly smart,” Sameer Samat, Google’s vice president of product management for Android, said during the Google I/O developers conference on Tuesday.