While some organizations are restricting employee usage of the new open source DeepSeek AI from a Chinese company due to data collection concerns, Microsoft has taken a different approach.
Microsoft begins integrating Deepseek R1 on its Copilot+ AI Platform. Check all details in the new venture of the Windows creator.
Distilled R1 models can now run locally on Copilot Plus PCs, starting with Qualcomm Snapdragon X first and Intel chips later.
The integration is expected to enhance Azure's portfolio of AI models, which now boasts more than 1,800 options for developers and businesses.
Microsoft is improving the consumer version of its Copilot assistant by making its "Think Deeper” feature free to use for all users.
DeepSeek thought for 19 seconds before answering the question, "Are you smarter than Gemini?" Then, it delivered a whopper: ...
A major outage has led to the failure of several GitHub services. Pull requests and issue generation or viewing were not possible at all for a while; ...
Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) reported its fiscal Q2 2025 earnings, surpassing Wall Street expectations with earnings ...
At an event in New York City on Thursday, Microsoft unveiled two additions to the Surface line of PCs. The new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop both arrive ...
Microsoft reported its Q2 2025 earnings Wednesday, showing its search and ad revenue rose 21%. In the previous quarter it was up 18% and 19%, respectively.
Microsoft's second quarter fiscal 2025 earnings show impressive growth in AI revenue, despite slightly slower Azure growth. Read more here.
Microsoft has integrated DeepSeek’s cost-effective R1 AI model into its Azure AI Foundry and GitHub, allowing developers to quickly incorporate it into their AI applications.