Tag: project

  • JetBlue will use Amazon's Project Kuiper satellites for free in-flight internet

    JetBlue will use Amazon's Project Kuiper satellites for free in-flight internet

    Many major airlines are beefing up their in-flight internet offerings by tapping SpaceX’s Starlink satellites, but JetBlue is going in a different direction. Amazon and JetBlue announced Thursday a partnership under which the airline will instead use Amazon’s Project Kuiper satellites to provide free in-flight connectivity starting in 2027.

    The Kuiper terminals on JetBlue’s planes will be capable of download speeds of up to 1Gbps from Amazon’s low-Earth orbit satellites. That’s more bandwidth than Starlink’s current max of 250 Mbps, although Amazon is only planning to build a network of 3,226 satellites, while SpaceX has launched more than 8,000. While Amazon has previously claimed it is more focused on “unserved and underserved communities around the world,” that language has been removed from its website.

    When the service goes live, JetBlue will be the first airline to use Kuiper satellites, which Amazon started launching to space in April. Amazon also announced earlier this year that it was integrating its satellite internet tech with Airbus planes.

    Those contracts are big steps for Kuiper, which has been in the works for years. The project has been bogged down by production problems, although Amazon has said it will be able to hit the mid-2026 deadline imposed by the Federal Communications Commission to launch the first half of its network into orbit.

  • NASA & Google unveil AI health guardian for Mars mission

    When the Mission Gets Longer, Health Gets Quicker

    Space agencies are dreaming of moon‑walks that last months and Mars voyages that last years.
    That means every astronaut has to become a one‑person medical department—no land‑based doctors, no on‑call nurse, and often no airways to call back to Earth to get help.

    The Truth Behind the “Healthy Cosmonauts” Myth

    • ISS astronauts receive real‑time chat with Houston.
    • They get frequent medical cargo and quick return flights after a six‑month stint.
    • But all that support evaporates when you’re one‑hundred thousand kilometers away.

    Enter NASA’s newest tool: the Crew Medical Officer Digital Assistant (CMO‑DA). Think of it as a friendly chatbot that can talk, read images, and even “speak” to you—sorta inside Google Cloud’s Vertex AI.

    How the AI Works (Because Technology Can Be a Buddy)

    NASA and Google teamed up on a fixed‑price, public‑sector agreement. The cost covers the cloud, the development UX, and the training of the model. NASA owns the source code, fine‑tunes the AI, and makes sure it works exactly how it should.

    In three simulated scenarios—an ankle sprain, flank pain, and ear pain—an expert panel (including an astronaut) let CMO‑DA run its thing. They checked:

    • Initial evaluation
    • History‑taking
    • Clinical reasoning
    • Treatment options

    Results That Make Head Nurses Go “Wow!”

    Flank Pain: 74% chance the AI’s diagnosis and plan matched what a human would do.
    Ear Pain: 80% accuracy—pretty good for an ear.

    Ankle Injury: an impressive 88% match—almost a full recovery!

    Why This Matters (And Why We’re All Excited)

    • It gives astronauts instant medical guidance when Earth’s help is down the line.
    • It’s a step toward autonomous—and somewhat humorous—space medicine, so they don’t have to pull out a snorkel for an ear problem.
    • It keeps crew health on a level that matches the big science of space travel.

    So the next time you think about a future Mars mission, remember—NASA’s already training AI to play the role of a doctor, astronaut, and friend all at once. That’s the kind of smart, human‑like approach that turns long‑duration space travel from a medical nightmare into a manageable, maybe even funny, adventure.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise.

    When AI Meets Zero‑G: Google & NASA’s Groundbreaking Space‑Health Project

    What We’re Looking At

    In a recent briefing, NASA researchers unveiled a leap toward a smart, space‑specific medical helper—an AI that’s not just crunching numbers but listening to the quirks of microgravity.

    • Incremental Growth: The roadmap is “deliberately incremental,” so expect small steps that build toward big leaps.
    • New Data Streams: From smart wearables to radiation monitors, the model is getting richer datasets.
    • “Situationally Aware” Design: Ready to spot and respond to the unique conditions that only floating ships can throw at us.

    Google’s Possible Earth‑Bound Twist

    While the tech is geared to orbit, Google’s CEO, Cruley, left the Earth‑bound future shrouded in mystery. If this assistant proves its worth in space, it could just hop into a doctor’s office—full regulatory clearance and all.

    Picture this: the same AI that checks telemetry and watches heartbeats in zero‑g now sits on your Couchside Health app, ready to whistle up the next best medical insight.

    Beyond the Stars: Health, On and Off Planet

    “The lessons learned from this tool could also have applicability to other areas of health,” Cruley told us, hinting the medical breakout could ripple through Earth‑bound wellness.

    • Shared Benefits: From managing chronic disease to tailoring personalized fitness plans.
    • One Insight, Two Worlds: What’s good for an astronaut’s circulation is great for a commuter stuck on a traffic jam.

    So, if you’re dreaming of watching star‑ry nights from a lunar base, you’ll soon have an AI buddy that understands the push and pull of your body and your environment—whether that’s the Earth’s gravity or the gentle pull of a distant planet. Strap in, because this is just the first orbit!

  • AI gaming startup Born raises M to build 'social' AI companions that combat loneliness

    AI gaming startup Born raises $15M to build 'social' AI companions that combat loneliness

    Fabian Kamberi, CEO and co-founder of the Berlin-based AI gaming startup Born, thinks the current AI companions on the market are designed to be exploitative and geared toward isolating users through one-to-one relationships with AI chatbots. 

    “It feels like it fuels the loneliness epidemic, instead of making it more fun and giving users the opportunity to make their lives better,” Kamberi told TechCrunch. 

    The future of AI companions, he says, is about shared experiences that strengthen real-world bonds.

    Born’s flagship AI product is an app where users can raise, play minigames with, and co-parent a cute virtual pet named Pengu. Think of it as a generative AI-powered Tamagotchi or Neopet, but one that requires collaboration with another human, like a friend or romantic partner.

    It’s a freemium app where users can pay for a Pengu Pass subscription for additional features. And while it’s reached more than 15 million users globally, according to Born, the company hasn’t disclosed how many of those are paying customers — a critical question for any consumer subscription business. 

    The idea behind Pengu is that the social aspect turns the pet into a shared project, helping users engage with both the AI character and their real-life relationships. Now Born is gearing up to release new characters for the Pengu app and launch another social AI product designed for young people. 

    Born’s thesis that AI companions should both entertain and incorporate a social element has attracted investor attention. The startup, formerly known as Slay, has raised a $15 million Series A, bringing its total funding to $25 million from investors, including Accel, Tencent, and Laton Ventures. 

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    The thesis doesn’t stray too far from when Born was Slay, a social media app for teenagers that revolved around giving and receiving compliments. At the time, Kamberi described Slay as the “go-to spot for teens to rediscover social interactions in various play modes.” The pivot to Born’s AI companions carries forward that same principle of making digital interactions more positive and socially engaging.

    With the fresh funds, Born plans to launch new characters on the Pengu app, including another “cute” digital companion that would double as a learning companion, according to Kamberi. The startup is also opening an office in New York later this year focused on marketing and AI research. That research will include improving its character engine so that each new AI friend can form a consistent personality, remember interactions, and grow alongside the user. Enrico Dal Re, Born’s head of finance, will lead the company’s expansion in the U.S.

    Born is also preparing to launch another AI social product specifically for young people ages 16 to 21 — though kids as young as 13 can use Born’s apps. Kamberi noted that Born mainly relies on OpenAI’s generative AI models but has built additional safety layers on top. 

    The new product is still in stealth mode, but Kamberi says it will allow users to create and engage with “culturally relevant AI companions that feel like real friends.” For example, the bots might send you TikTok videos or Instagram Reels based on the content you already consume on social media, he said. 

    Kamberi added that he expects Born’s new product to have “network effects” as users share their creations on social media.  

    “We don’t believe that the current chatbot landscape is the final form factor for how AI friends and consumer AI is done,” Kamberi said. “There must be ways for consumer social AI to be way more engaging to users than just entering a platform and texting a bot that was maybe created by me or another person.”

    For Luca Bocchio, partner at Accel, the appeal lies in Born’s ambition to create a new consumer social category built around emotionally intelligent AI characters.

    “We’ve been really impressed by the team’s ability to develop chart-topping apps and their inspiring product vision, and we’re looking forward to continuing our partnership with them as they scale globally,” Bocchio said. 

  • Elon Musk Shuts Down Tesla’s Dojo, Labels It an Evolutionary Dead-End

    Tesla’s Epic Dojo Exit: Why the Supercomputer Dream Took a Backseat

    In a surprise twist that’d make any sci‑fi plot look tame, Elon Musk announced that Tesla has disbanded the entire Dojo AI training squad. The move came right after he bragged that a second Dojo cluster would be booming in 2026. Musk’s short tweet on X made it clear — Dojo 2 was dead, and Dojo 3 is basically a shiny new chip family on a board.

    The Dojo Saga at a Glance

    • First Dojo: Guns of a NVIDIA GPU fleet + in‑house D1 chips.
    • Plan for a second factory (dubbed “Dojo 2”) powered by the next‑gen D2 chip.
    • Now D2 is shelved. The entire Dojo flash‑point has been redirected.

    Why the Shift to AI5 and AI6?

    Elon’s latest tweets explain it most plainly: split resources on two divergent AI designs = wasted effort. Tesla is throwing its full weight behind AI5 (for FSD “Full Self‑Driving”) and AI6 (for the mind‑blowing inference on cars, robots, and massive AI training).

    Bottom‑Line Takeaways

    • AI5 & AI6 will win at inference. They’re also good (though maybe not perfect) for training.
    • Instead of juggling separate clusters, Tesla will pile multiple AI5/AI6 chips on a single board.
    • This design cuts network cabling and costs by “a few orders of magnitude.”
    • In other words, Dojo 3 = large‑scale, cost‑efficient AI powerhouse.

    So What About the “Supercomputer”?

    In short: the old Dojo vision has taken a backseat. Instead, Tesla’s roadmap now focusses on AI5 and AI6 chips produced by TSMC & Samsung. These will power car autopilots, humanoid robots, and the massive training that keeps Tesla’s AI edge sharp.

    Elon wrapped it up with a wink, “One could call that Dojo 3, I suppose.” That’s the story of a shooting star that’s now migrating toward a more practical, chip‑centric galaxy.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise.

    Tesla’s AI Playground: Dojo, Cortex, and a Dash of Destiny

    2019: The Dojo Dream Begins

    Back in 2019, Elon Musk floated the idea of Dojo—a massive GPU‑powered training rig that would help Tesla grind out self‑driving algorithms and, oh yeah, launch the robots that’ll make a robot‑café happen.

    The Big Pause in August 2024

    • Mid‑2024, Musk shifted his spotlight to Cortex, a new colossal AI cluster being built at the Austin headquarters.
    • Cortex promises to tackle “real‑world AI” challenges, moving the needle from quiet crunch‑sessions in Buffalo to a broader, planet‑wide AI push.
    • But the chatter around Cortex has slowed—​no official rollout date yet.
    Buffalo’s Half‑Built Hive

    Remember the hefty $500 million that went into the Buffalo Dojo? That facility sits half‑constructed, a chimney of unfinished potential that TechCrunch now hopes Tesla will either finish or replace. We’re waiting to see if the “smart brick” of the future will still stick around.

    Behind the Scenes: Tesla’s Sales Slump & Political Shake‑up

    Latest news tells us Tesla’s EV sales have dipped, and a whirl of political commentary by Musk has dented the brand’s glow. The company is scrambling to keep investors convinced it’s still the king of autonomy.

    The long‑planned robotaxi in Austin rolled out last June, but chaos ensued: the vehicles repeatedly showed “bad driving” signs—​yikes. With these incidents in mind, Musk’s confidence in the future of self‑driving and humanoid robots is both his driving force and a gamble.

    For a silver lining, Tesla is eager to connect with its audience more intimately. If you’re interested in finishing‑off feedback and snagging a trivia challenge‑style prize, just fill out the survey at the bottom of the page.