Google CEO Sundar Pichai and SpaceX’s Elon Musk praised Jeff Bezos for Blue Origin’s milestone as New Glenn rocket completes its first test flight. It
World’s-richest-man Elon Musk, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and Amazon chief Jeff Bezos are slated to attend the forty-seventh president’s inauguration next week, according to NBC News. The tech trio will be seated alongside elected officials and Trump’s Cabinet selections.
Microsoft’s top leaders met with President-elect Trump, Vice President-elect Vance and Elon Musk at Mar-a-Lago on Wednesday, a company spokesperson confirmed to The Hill. Microsoft CEO Satya
Elon Musk tops the list as the highest-paid CEO globally with $23.5 billion, primarily from Tesla's stock options. Tim Cook of Apple and Sundar Pichai
Cryptocurrency is gaining mainstream acceptance with each passing day. The endorsement it received from President-elect Donald Trump during the 2024 election campaign has further cemented its legitimacy within the financial industry and among the public.
Sundar Pichai joins tech giants like Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, and Tim Cook at Donald Trump’s inauguration on January 20. This event is historic as it coincides with Martin Luther King Jr. Day, marking a notable overlap in presidential swearing-in ceremonies.
This year’s Inauguration Day falls on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a federal holiday. For the first time in this century, a US president will take the oath on a federal holiday. Typically, Inauguration Day falls on January 20, or January 21 if it lands on a Sunday, but the overlap this year has introduced some unique scheduling challenges.
Incoming presidents do not generally want to be seen as rewarding the hyper-wealthy with special political perks. Team Trump apparently doesn’t much care.
Many of these firms are still building and scaling commercial businesses, instead focusing on honing the underlying technology and achieving certain necessary breakthroughs, like milestones in quantum error correction.
TikTok is set to go down — for now. The popular video-sharing app, used by 170 million Americans, was set to go dark late Saturday after TikTok’s Chinese-owned parent company announced late Saturday that they will make their services “temporarily unavailable.