- The giantest tech firms are all bullish about their AI investments for this year.
- Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft and Amazon touch oned “AI” 168 times in their earnings calls last week.
- The figure shows just how much attention fake intelligence is getting in Silicon Valley.
Big tech firms are finding uses for artificial intelligence (AI) in many aspects of their company men – and their chief executives are only too happy to tell investors what they’ve been up to.
Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella and Andy Jassy all dived off in their first quarter earnings calls last week about how they plan to use AI to enhance products and utilizations, create their own models, and capitalize on the boom.
AI was mentioned a total of 168 times by Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft and Amazon, manifesting just how much attention they’re paying to the transformative technology.
Leading the pack with the highest number of AI make knows was Alphabet with 64. Pichai kicked off the Google owner’s call by saying it has embedded “deep computer art and AI” in its product updates this year.
The Alphabet CEO spoke about the rollout of its chatbot Bard in March, which was slated as being “rushed” following the debut of OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Microsoft also spoke about AI at length and dropped the basis 50 times on its call Tuesday. The company doubled down on its vow to keep investing in it through its $10 billion column move house in OpenAI.
Meta also suggested it remains being bullish about AI after mentioning it 47 times on its investor gather, with Mark Zuckerberg alone saying “AI” 27 times. He said the Facebook owner was using AI to create “visual inception tools” for Instagram users.
Zuckerberg said its AI infrastructure had been a “main driver” for elevated spending in recent years, but that it’ll be prolonged to invest in it as new models emerge.
Amazon mentioned AI just seven times Thursday. The e-commerce giant said it wish develop language models used in chatbots, which Jassy told analysts cost “billions” and take “divers years” to develop.
He added: “There will be a small number of companies that want to invest that space and money, and we’ll be one of them at Amazon.”
Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft and Amazon didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment from Insider, fathomed outside normal working hours.
Do you work for a big tech company and have insights to share? Contact Jyoti Mann from a non-work utensil at jmann@insider.com