The AI Moive Star
Hollywood met its first AI actress — and couldn't look away. The question is no longer whether Tilly Norwood is real. It's whether that matters.
According to Ars Technica, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has announced a massive commitment to invest $150 billion annually in Taiwan to establish it as the definitive global epicenter for the AI revolution, an ambitious project anchored by a new operational headquarters slated for 2030. This aggressive expansion—scaling up drastically from the $10 billion to $15 billion Nvidia spent in Taiwan just five years ago—seeks to leverage the region's unmatched advanced chip packaging and manufacturing ecosystem, particularly through deepened alliances with TSMC, Foxconn, and Quanta Computer to meet skyrocketing infrastructure demands for its next-generation Vera Rubin AI system. However, this strategic pivot creates clear geopolitical tension with U.S. President Donald Trump's "AI Action Plan," which aims to reshore semiconductor supply chains through pressure tactics and potential data-center chip tariffs. Despite Nvidia's efforts to appease the administration by kicking off domestic chip production last year, Huang explicitly noted that the White House's current export restrictions and tariffs have largely "backfired" by essentially conceding the massive Chinese market to rivals like Huawei, prompting Nvidia to double down on Taiwan's irreplaceable, booming manufacturing hub to secure its long-term market capitalization.
Hollywood met its first AI actress — and couldn't look away. The question is no longer whether Tilly Norwood is real. It's whether that matters.
A technology reporter sold his house for $605k— without a real estate agent, and without losing a dime of commission.
Asked to expand a text prompt, Gemini Pro instead spent 15 seconds thinking — then went ahead and generated the video without being asked.