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Sep 13, 2024
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julia, thank you very much julia boorstin >>> let's take another look at trump media djt up 25% afterief halt it's currently halted again, all this have comes after the fromm s former president says he's not selling shares . ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ this one is for you. (♪♪) the best way to solve a problem is to keep it from happening. (♪♪) at evernorth, we combine medical and pharmacy data with behavioral health data to identify members in need of care. predicting and treating behavioral health issues quickly... while lowering costs for plan sponsors and members. that's wonder made possible. evernorth health services (office chatter) is it me...or is work not working? at least, not the way it could work. your people are buried in busy work. and you might be thinking... can ai make it all work? can ai help your people work... without all the workarounds? feel better. make customer service work the way customers expect? that one. make your old tech work with your new tech? thank you. and todd here is wondering, can ai do all that... now? no pressure. it can. on the servicenow platform, ai transforms yo
julia, thank you very much julia boorstin >>> let's take another look at trump media djt up 25% afterief halt it's currently halted again, all this have comes after the fromm s former president says he's not selling shares . ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ this one is for you. (♪♪) the best way to solve a problem is to keep it from happening. (♪♪) at evernorth, we combine medical and pharmacy data with behavioral health data to identify members in need of care. predicting and treating...
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Sep 6, 2024
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julia boorstin.hat. >> i like it. i actually owned it until through weeks ago, extraordinary run and felt like it was time to take a breather. that was the wrong move and sold it around 27. i think it's going higher. we just got numbers from the company and it fits under a high multiple tech stock that needs to support its earnings profile. $70 billion company at this point that i think has some very sweet choice fortune 500 companies. it's not just the government anymore in terms of contracts. they are some of the smartest guys in the room at a time when we know this space has everybody's attention. >> dell is interesting. we've spent a lot of time, the servers that go into these, you know, data centers powering the testing of these large language models and so, again, this is a low margin business and we think that there's going to be pressure on this going forward, but here's the thing, when you have a stock up 7% on this announcement, these are not the indexers that have to put these stocks into
julia boorstin.hat. >> i like it. i actually owned it until through weeks ago, extraordinary run and felt like it was time to take a breather. that was the wrong move and sold it around 27. i think it's going higher. we just got numbers from the company and it fits under a high multiple tech stock that needs to support its earnings profile. $70 billion company at this point that i think has some very sweet choice fortune 500 companies. it's not just the government anymore in terms of...
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Sep 27, 2024
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in the latest, julia boorstin looks at how tech is changing the education landscape. >> reporter: wither shortages, this year, teachers are using new a.i. tools to do more with less. a leading a.i. startup magic school, is used by 3 million educators across the country. while most of the teachers are using it for free, 5500 schools are using the premium version. one, green dot, took us inside the charter school in california to show how a.i. is helping teach. after a trial period last year, his school just started paying for a full rollout of the software this semester. he showed us how his teachers use the platform's 70 plus tools. for everything from grading and kr crafting lesson plans. >> all of these are so quickly. >> teachers are asked to do a lot to prepare. this gives an opportunity for teachers to spend less time doing more. >> reporter: magic school started rolling out 40 plus tools for students, including chat bots that teachers can customize based on the student. >> the teachers will customize them and make sure they work for the grade level and test them in their playgrou
in the latest, julia boorstin looks at how tech is changing the education landscape. >> reporter: wither shortages, this year, teachers are using new a.i. tools to do more with less. a leading a.i. startup magic school, is used by 3 million educators across the country. while most of the teachers are using it for free, 5500 schools are using the premium version. one, green dot, took us inside the charter school in california to show how a.i. is helping teach. after a trial period last...
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Sep 26, 2024
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juewel julia boorstin filed thi report. >> reporter: with a.i. at the center of everything.ng with the new lower cost virtual reality crest 3 head set, the company revealing orion. augmented reality glasses which zuckerberg called the most innovative glasses the world has seen. you can see through them and see h holographic displays. i spoke to the company about the bottom line. >> everything we talked about with owe rion will accrue vr. for the long-term business model of the company, it behooves us to have the ecosystem and refinements and improvements. >> reporter: zuckerberg also announcing new features for meta a.i. and whatsapp and messenger and instagram. you can pick among celebrity voices. zuckerberg saying 500 million people are using meta a.i. the ray ban glasses are getting live translation and the ability to areview set reminders. it did not review for advertisers, but continues to see strong adoption of the tools it rolled out. meta said more than 1 million advertisers are using the a.i. tools and 15 million ads are created with the tools last month. julia boor
juewel julia boorstin filed thi report. >> reporter: with a.i. at the center of everything.ng with the new lower cost virtual reality crest 3 head set, the company revealing orion. augmented reality glasses which zuckerberg called the most innovative glasses the world has seen. you can see through them and see h holographic displays. i spoke to the company about the bottom line. >> everything we talked about with owe rion will accrue vr. for the long-term business model of the...
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Sep 27, 2024
09/24
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julia boorstin has more as part of her continuing series on the impact around a.i. julia?r for teachers who are trying to do more with less, and a.i. is also powering the next generation of ed tech start-ups. with teacher shortages putting more demands on educators than ever, this year, teachers are using new a.i. tools to help them do more with less. a leading a.i. start-up, magic school, is used by three million educators across the country. while most of those teachers are using it for free, 5,500 schools pay for a premium version for about $5 per student per year. one of those subscribers, green dot, took us inside one of its 18 los angeles charter schools to show us how a.i. is helping teachers teach. james fiddler is a green dot assistant principal. after a trial period last year, his school just started paying for a full rollout of the software this semester. he showed us how his teachers used the platform's 70-plus tools. for everything from grading and crafting lesson plans to building presentations with generative a.i. >> all of these queries are being answered s
julia boorstin has more as part of her continuing series on the impact around a.i. julia?r for teachers who are trying to do more with less, and a.i. is also powering the next generation of ed tech start-ups. with teacher shortages putting more demands on educators than ever, this year, teachers are using new a.i. tools to help them do more with less. a leading a.i. start-up, magic school, is used by three million educators across the country. while most of those teachers are using it for free,...
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Sep 23, 2024
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julia boorstin has more on what we can expect there. julia? >> that's right, melissa. two analysts were out with bullish notes today on meta, ahead of its connect developer conference, which is happening wednesday and thursday at meta hq. now, shares are up for meta over 89% in the past 12 months, gaining just about 3% today after citi raised its target price to $645. and b of a reiterated its buy rating on the stock ahead of that connect conference. analysts expect the company to reveal prototypes of its new augmented reality glasses, including potentially hold graphic capabilitcapabilities. the company is expected to launch a lower price quest headset. $299 price point. that's down from the current $499 price for the quest 3. the company is also expected to showcase new a.i. capabilities, and some new generative a.i. tools. citi says that new generative a.i. creative tools have potential benefits to advertisers and therefore to the company's top line. new street research writing last week that while meta will share nothing about its ad revenue or its ad business, whi
julia boorstin has more on what we can expect there. julia? >> that's right, melissa. two analysts were out with bullish notes today on meta, ahead of its connect developer conference, which is happening wednesday and thursday at meta hq. now, shares are up for meta over 89% in the past 12 months, gaining just about 3% today after citi raised its target price to $645. and b of a reiterated its buy rating on the stock ahead of that connect conference. analysts expect the company to reveal...
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Sep 24, 2024
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the company's developers conference begins tomorrow and julia boorstin will be there she joins us nowe glasses, julia >> well, there's a lot to look out for tomorrow at meta connect. and meta is expected to unveil new ai tools tomorrow there. and that's all part of its plan to spread adoption of its open source ai llama model to avoid the emergence of a clear ai gate keeper like apple is on mobile devices. now meta going all in on open source, has exponentially grown its ai reach and adoption while rivals are offering paid enterprise models. the meta's llama models downloaded over 350 million times since early last time, including 20 million times in august and llama usage across its major cloud service providers, including microsoft, amazon, nvidia doubled may through july. now all of those big numbers speak to the wide range of companies that are building applications with meta's open source software from goldman sachs using it to help extract data from documents. at&t is using for customer service tools. and accenture used it as well. plus, ai startups are now building with llama,
the company's developers conference begins tomorrow and julia boorstin will be there she joins us nowe glasses, julia >> well, there's a lot to look out for tomorrow at meta connect. and meta is expected to unveil new ai tools tomorrow there. and that's all part of its plan to spread adoption of its open source ai llama model to avoid the emergence of a clear ai gate keeper like apple is on mobile devices. now meta going all in on open source, has exponentially grown its ai reach and...
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Sep 4, 2024
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julia boorstin with us. she will kick it off. >> thanks so much, brian. joining us amid these negotiations and this standoff. just yesterday, espn chair told me that disney is offering flexibility including the option for a sports specific skinnier bundle. how do you respond to that? >> yeah, well, we've seen this before with disney's messaging and it's a half truth. they have offered us skinny sports package to what jimmy shared yesterday with a broadcast attachment. however, what they fail to mention is that they lace that and tie that, those rights, so minimum penetration requirements, which are basically contractual terms that force us to carry the rest of their portfolio to certain levels and with those requirements, those limit the scope and the reach of the product that we're trying to put forth in the marketplace. ironically, that was not what they gave themselves in venue and that came through pretty clearly in judge garnet's ruling in the fubo case. >> it sounds like you're very much interested in getting the same rights that disney offered for
julia boorstin with us. she will kick it off. >> thanks so much, brian. joining us amid these negotiations and this standoff. just yesterday, espn chair told me that disney is offering flexibility including the option for a sports specific skinnier bundle. how do you respond to that? >> yeah, well, we've seen this before with disney's messaging and it's a half truth. they have offered us skinny sports package to what jimmy shared yesterday with a broadcast attachment. however, what...
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Sep 12, 2024
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supportive of an inflection point for premium furnishing back to you, scott >> thank you that's julia boorstin little bit michael, back to you got less than 90 seconds nice, broad day, too every sector as we smpeak is in the green. >> yes that is a bit of a switch from yesterday when it was pretty narrow i think breadth is one of the things that probably still lines up as a net asset because it was so strong coming off the early august low we mentioned coming into the week that some folks were going to try to map the august experience on to september in terms of a lot of weakness packed into the first several trading days of the month. everyone geared up for more seasonal declines and maybe the market can pull a rabbit out of the hat. here we are. we have most of the information we're going to have going into next week's fed meeting. we know that real gdp and annualized inflation are both running in this comfortable 2 to 3% zone. the entire debate is about whether that's a stable or fragile equilibrium for now and whether the fed is willing to go a little bit farther as a gesture to make sure
supportive of an inflection point for premium furnishing back to you, scott >> thank you that's julia boorstin little bit michael, back to you got less than 90 seconds nice, broad day, too every sector as we smpeak is in the green. >> yes that is a bit of a switch from yesterday when it was pretty narrow i think breadth is one of the things that probably still lines up as a net asset because it was so strong coming off the early august low we mentioned coming into the week that some...
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Sep 3, 2024
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julia boorstin has been following this story and spoke earlier to the head of espn. julia? the middle of the u.s. open, ahead of sunday's college football game and before the nfl season opener, disney pulled its abc stations, espn and other networks from directv's more than 11 million satellite subscribers on sunday. now the contract dispute between disney and directv speaks to disney's focus on streaming and cord cutting. it is looking to offer smaller and cheaper bundles to their customers. directv says, quote, disney is again taking an anti-consumer approach demanding that customers from directv and other distributors be forced to pay for channels they don't watch. espn chairperson telling me that they have been flexible and what directv says is flat out false. >> we never want to blackout. it's not good for either side. it's not good for the customer, of course. we did everything we could. we worked very hard to reach agreement. we were unable to get there. and we were unable to get there because directv has refused to acknowledge or recognize the value of our content.
julia boorstin has been following this story and spoke earlier to the head of espn. julia? the middle of the u.s. open, ahead of sunday's college football game and before the nfl season opener, disney pulled its abc stations, espn and other networks from directv's more than 11 million satellite subscribers on sunday. now the contract dispute between disney and directv speaks to disney's focus on streaming and cord cutting. it is looking to offer smaller and cheaper bundles to their customers....
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Sep 19, 2024
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julia boorstin here with more on that move. hi, julia. >> that's right. meta shares are up over 4% following post-fed optimism and well on their way to close at a record high. now,meta has been on a tear, is up over 83% over the past 12 months. today's move higher along with the rest of mega cap tech comes despite two pieces of negative news. the ftc issued a report finding that meta and other social media companies are collecting and using consumer data in a way that endangers people's privacy, recommending that congress pass comprehensive federal privacy legislation and better safeguard for kids and teens. plus the ft reports meta's facing a big fine in the eu over its alleged efforts to dominate classified advertising with its marketplace service. but mike, that's not stopping the stock, now up 4.25%. >> no not at all stopping. it's one of the only mega cap tech stocks that is now making new highs. and it's hard not to notice the outperformance of meta relative to alphabet. probably the biggest gap between those, you know, over a one-year period on a 6
julia boorstin here with more on that move. hi, julia. >> that's right. meta shares are up over 4% following post-fed optimism and well on their way to close at a record high. now,meta has been on a tear, is up over 83% over the past 12 months. today's move higher along with the rest of mega cap tech comes despite two pieces of negative news. the ftc issued a report finding that meta and other social media companies are collecting and using consumer data in a way that endangers people's...
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Sep 10, 2024
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growing leagues in the world, thanks in part to a massive influx of rookie star power this year our julia boorstinon brink. julia, take it away. >> melissa, thank you so much. and cameron, thank you so much for joining us you know, you were number two overall wnba draft pick, and you are coming off record ratings for the women's ncaa season. what do you think is driving this interest, not just in the wnba, which also had a big surge in ratings, but just women's sports in general? >> yeah, i mean, that's such a great question i think it's really been social media and we've really been able to brand ourselves without, you know, brands having to partner with us. we're able to put our stories out there. i think -- i always say this, but we have to look to the women before us that have kind of been building this path for us, so, you know, without the lisa leslies of the world, we wouldn't be here >> you mentioned social media. you've been building your audience on social media since you were in high school. and that's led you to have an amazing assortment of brand partners, including new balance. how d
growing leagues in the world, thanks in part to a massive influx of rookie star power this year our julia boorstinon brink. julia, take it away. >> melissa, thank you so much. and cameron, thank you so much for joining us you know, you were number two overall wnba draft pick, and you are coming off record ratings for the women's ncaa season. what do you think is driving this interest, not just in the wnba, which also had a big surge in ratings, but just women's sports in general? >>...
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Sep 12, 2024
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disappointing q-4 guidance the ceo just spoke exclusively to cnbc in the last hour julia boorstin hasecap of the interview and a breakdown of the results. julia? >> that's right. shares are down 10% in afterhours, after adobe's fourth quarter revenue guidance missed estimates. forecasting $5 billion to $5.5 billion, slightly lower than the street expected. despite that disappointing outlook, when the ceo joined us in the last hour, he said he feels good about adobe's future. >> most people would characterize the economy as either, you know, a little bit slow, or stable. we have seen stability in our business i think we're all probably looking forward to seeing what both the fed says, as well as what happens in the elections. but if you look at our fundamental long-term trends and the ability for technology to continue to drive even more value, we're bullish >> he also says he's bullish on the company's a.i. initiatives, saying he does not think there's another company that's demonstrated the amount of innovation that adobe's a.i. assistant has. melissa, you see shares now down 10%, an
disappointing q-4 guidance the ceo just spoke exclusively to cnbc in the last hour julia boorstin hasecap of the interview and a breakdown of the results. julia? >> that's right. shares are down 10% in afterhours, after adobe's fourth quarter revenue guidance missed estimates. forecasting $5 billion to $5.5 billion, slightly lower than the street expected. despite that disappointing outlook, when the ceo joined us in the last hour, he said he feels good about adobe's future. >> most...
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Sep 17, 2024
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let's get over now to julia boorstin who is joined by a special guest who knows a little about these ? >> thanks so much, tyler. and evan, thank you so much for joining us here from your big partner summit, where you just unveiled really big news. i am going to ask you about that instagram news. but first i want to start off with your news. you just unveiled your next generation of spectacles, they're augmented reality glasses and also operating system for developers. when will consumers be able to buy these devices? and how much are they going to cost? who are you competing with here? >> thank you, julia. we are so excited that you're here with us today at the snap partner summit. we're even more excited about the snap spectacles the fifth generation is out today featuring our all-new operating system that's based on natural interaction. so you just use your hands and your voice to interact with augmented reality. and what's so exciting about spectacles is it brings us closer to our vision grounded in the real world with their friends and that's something we have been working on for
let's get over now to julia boorstin who is joined by a special guest who knows a little about these ? >> thanks so much, tyler. and evan, thank you so much for joining us here from your big partner summit, where you just unveiled really big news. i am going to ask you about that instagram news. but first i want to start off with your news. you just unveiled your next generation of spectacles, they're augmented reality glasses and also operating system for developers. when will consumers...
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Sep 30, 2024
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and julia boorstin did an outstanding job.a great dinner after, so, it will be interesting to see who they pick this year. i put my picks in. >> oh. >> hope i get a couple of them. >> time for the final trade. let's go around the horn. courtney? >> emerging markets here, vwo. we talk a lot about china, but even india has a really impressive growth rate. >> is that the v in the v scheme? >> just rom rolls off the tongu. >> karen? >> mine is jpmorgan on the heels of that morgan stanley downgrade. i still like it and nobody puts jamie in the corner. >> dan? >> she's sogood at mark. she's so bad at acronyms. let's just be clear on that. target is interesting here. >> guy? >> i hate the mets, as you know, but you have to give them their just due. big win, congrats. take a look at what, mel? >> at what, mel? the nasdaq. happy 25-year anniversary. "mad money" starts right now. >>> my mission is simple. to make you money. i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there's always a bull market somewhere, and i promise to he
and julia boorstin did an outstanding job.a great dinner after, so, it will be interesting to see who they pick this year. i put my picks in. >> oh. >> hope i get a couple of them. >> time for the final trade. let's go around the horn. courtney? >> emerging markets here, vwo. we talk a lot about china, but even india has a really impressive growth rate. >> is that the v in the v scheme? >> just rom rolls off the tongu. >> karen? >> mine is...
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Sep 16, 2024
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julia boorstin will tell us right after this break.♪ tony, its gone. no. how am i going to do this? welcome to the mdy mid-cap cup, presented by state street global advisors. today's challenge is to play 9 holes without the middle of your bag. how does that sound? that sounds terrible. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ >>> directv and disney ending their two-week-long blackout saturday just in time for college football. julia boorstin joins us to break down what the deal says about the future of the media industry. good morning. >> andrew, two weeks after the blackout began the fact access to disney's channel was restored to drect-tv customers just in time for college the football games speaks to the importance of sports, which is the highest rated live content. also highlights the growing importance of streaming services to both the media giants and the tv distributors amid the decline of the paid-tv ecosystem. how the two companies compromised. in addition to directv paying for linear channels directv can offer genre specific. disney streaming services, d
julia boorstin will tell us right after this break.♪ tony, its gone. no. how am i going to do this? welcome to the mdy mid-cap cup, presented by state street global advisors. today's challenge is to play 9 holes without the middle of your bag. how does that sound? that sounds terrible. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ >>> directv and disney ending their two-week-long blackout saturday just in time for college football. julia boorstin joins us to break down what the deal says about the...
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Sep 3, 2024
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julia boorstin joins us now with the latest. it's pretty good weekend for sports.e middle of the u.s. open, ahead of sunday night's college football game and before the nfl's season opener this week, disney pulled its abc stations espn and other cable networks from directv's more than 11 million satellite subscribers. their contract dispute speaks to the media giant's growing focus on streaming and the online -- the ongoing decline of the paid tv ecosystem. distributors wanting to be able to offer their customers smaller bundles, while the media giants want to secure pay increase, while they pay more for content including sports. directv, which is pushing to access for a smaller bundle of channels says, quote, disney is again taking an anti-consumer approach, demanding that customers from directv and other tv distributors be forced to pay for channels they don't watch. and demanding directv customers pay for access for disney-owned streaming services they either aren't interested in or may already possess. directv also saying that disney has demanded that dtv waive
julia boorstin joins us now with the latest. it's pretty good weekend for sports.e middle of the u.s. open, ahead of sunday night's college football game and before the nfl's season opener this week, disney pulled its abc stations espn and other cable networks from directv's more than 11 million satellite subscribers. their contract dispute speaks to the media giant's growing focus on streaming and the online -- the ongoing decline of the paid tv ecosystem. distributors wanting to be able to...
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Sep 27, 2024
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let's get to julia boorstin for what that means for schools, an angle we haven't hit on that much, julia leaps in generative a.i. are offering teachers new tools and powering the fast growth of a.i. education startups. with teacher shortages putting more demands on educators than ever, this year teachers are using new a.i. tools to help them do more with less. a leading a.i. startup magic school is used by 3 million educators across the country. while most of those teachers are using it for free, 5,500 schools pay for a premium version for about $5 per student per year. one of those subscribers, green dot, took us inside one of its 18 los angeles charter schools to show us how a.i. is helping teachers teach. james fiddler is a green dot assistant principal. after a trial period last year, his school just started paying for a full rollout of the software this semester. he showed us how his teachers use the platform's 70-plus tools, everything from grading and crafting lesson plans, to building presentations with generative a.i. >> all of these queries are being answered to quickly. how mu
let's get to julia boorstin for what that means for schools, an angle we haven't hit on that much, julia leaps in generative a.i. are offering teachers new tools and powering the fast growth of a.i. education startups. with teacher shortages putting more demands on educators than ever, this year teachers are using new a.i. tools to help them do more with less. a leading a.i. startup magic school is used by 3 million educators across the country. while most of those teachers are using it for...
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Sep 3, 2024
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i'm julia boorstin with your c nbz nbc news update.he start of russia's invasion since 2022. according to zelenskyy two ballistic missiles hit a training facility and the a nearby hospital in central ukraine. he says another 180 people were hurt. russia has not yet commented on the attack. >>> pope francis arrived in indonesia to start the longest trip his papacy. he's the first to visit the country since 1989. he'll also visit papua new guinea and singapore. >> traveling to new zealand is getting more expensive. the country is tripling the entry fees for tourists. the government issued a statement today saying the fee will increase from $35 new zealand dollars to $100. that's about $62. carl, back over to you. >> julia, thank you very much. major averages trading lower to start this month of september. our bob pisani has more on today's movers and maybe a comment, bob, on what happened on friday afternoon. >> yeah. we had a nice little rally towards the close and we're giving up that and more right now. we said weak economic data, ism
i'm julia boorstin with your c nbz nbc news update.he start of russia's invasion since 2022. according to zelenskyy two ballistic missiles hit a training facility and the a nearby hospital in central ukraine. he says another 180 people were hurt. russia has not yet commented on the attack. >>> pope francis arrived in indonesia to start the longest trip his papacy. he's the first to visit the country since 1989. he'll also visit papua new guinea and singapore. >> traveling to new...
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Sep 26, 2024
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julia boorstin was there talking with the chief product officer which was unusual. going over the analyst recaps of the event and one number that stood out to me from wedbush the reality labs of meta, the investments, it's an area of investor debate because it's still a lot of losses -- >> so much money. >> $16.7 billion operating losses over the past 12 months. >> right. that's incredible. for a thing about $2 billion in revenue. >> sure. >> although -- >> the glasses may bail them out at some point, i don't know. >> increasingly analyst and wedbush was bullish on the name, increasingly think it's going to be more tied to the core business, the core story as ai sort of takes over the company. >> ai, of course, being their open source llama. 3.2 model, expanded business ai, chatbots unveiled, things like customer support. take a listen to what zuckerberg had to say at the conference. >> a lot of the stuff that we've been talking about for a long time, right, glasses, mixed reality, ai, it's happening, and, you know, we can start to see how the future of computing an
julia boorstin was there talking with the chief product officer which was unusual. going over the analyst recaps of the event and one number that stood out to me from wedbush the reality labs of meta, the investments, it's an area of investor debate because it's still a lot of losses -- >> so much money. >> $16.7 billion operating losses over the past 12 months. >> right. that's incredible. for a thing about $2 billion in revenue. >> sure. >> although -- >>...
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Sep 13, 2024
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julia boorstin joins us to break this down and who's benefiting from the trend beyond hopefully the studentsgy a trend affectionately called "dumb tech." nine states enacting laws or policies restricting k-12 cell phone usage in schools including completely banning smartphones in school. here in los angeles, the second largest school district a ban put in effect on smartphones in schools early next year. the u.s. surgeon general calling for warring on social media, parents and schools thinking about alternatives to the current trend of giving kids phones the national institute of health says as many as 53% of children have a smartphone by age 11. one company benefitting from smartphone backwbacklash, on trt double pouches to 2 million across all united states and gap. safe phones just for kids. doubled number of phones sold every year for the past five years. another company called lightphone designed its streamlined devices which offer calls, texting and navigation for adults who want to minimize distraction, but the devices have been embraceed by younger users along with some schools and p
julia boorstin joins us to break this down and who's benefiting from the trend beyond hopefully the studentsgy a trend affectionately called "dumb tech." nine states enacting laws or policies restricting k-12 cell phone usage in schools including completely banning smartphones in school. here in los angeles, the second largest school district a ban put in effect on smartphones in schools early next year. the u.s. surgeon general calling for warring on social media, parents and schools...