Wifd Interview: Bill Murphy, Hilton s new CIO/CTO
How long will businesses keep blindly buying hydrojug tumbler into the hype Credit: Google/JR Raphael, Foundry On a week like this, itrsquo hard not to feel like yoursquo;re living in dueling realities.On one side, yoursquo;ve got the futuristic vision Google is telling you ab owala website out at its annual developer event, Google I/O.Related: Google Cloud I/O 2025: News and insights ]The company waxed on for stanley cup nearly two hours about how its Gemini generative AI assistant will help provide even more complex answers from the web, make purchases and complete bookings on your behalf, and generally just do all the Gemini stuff it does now faster and better. And it isnrsquo;t alone: Just a day earlier, Microsoft told us at its Build event how Copilot will soon act as an enterprise brain and ldquo uggest ideas as you type mdash; even, conceivably, offering to create entire legal agreements on your behalf. If you believe what these companies are saying along with the same sorts of surreal-seeming realities being laid out by OpenAI and mdash; well, practically every other tech player out there these days , wersquo;re living in an era where artificial intelligence is always on the brink of a life-changing breakthrough.Whatrsquo especially wild is that none of this is even that big of a leap from what these same sorts of systems have already been promising and the Hone New MacBook Pro SD slot is for More than just photos
Itrsquo a pretty slow business week when Xeroxrsquo $6.4 billion proposed acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services dominates the news.Xerox, after all, is the U.S. scion of printing and paper copiers. Affiliated Computer Services, or ACS, is an outsourcer that contracts with government entities, health-care companies and insurers on servicing their paper-based claims a