CoreWeave, Inc.’s CRWV Weights & Biases (W&B) inference capabilities have been leveraged by Cline to enhance its ecosystem, enabling developers to build and deploy autonomous coding systems with improved performance, scalability and operational efficiency. By tapping into CoreWeave’s production-ready AI infrastructure, purpose-built for both training and inference, the integration is poised to acc...
CoreWeave, Inc.’s CRWV Weights & Biases (W&B) inference capabilities have been leveraged by Cline to enhance its ecosystem, enabling developers to build and deploy autonomous coding systems with improved performance, scalability and operational efficiency. By tapping into CoreWeave’s production-ready AI infrastructure, purpose-built for both training and inference, the integration is poised to accelerate next-generation autonomous software workflows. W&B is an important component within the CoreWeave ecosystem, providing machine learning tools that help developers track experiments, manage models and streamline AI workflows. Its integration with CoreWeave’s platform has driven strong cross-selling momentum, with W&B customers contributing hundreds of millions of dollars in contract value by also consuming the company’s cloud infrastructure. This reflects a broader trend where customers move beyond just GPU usage to adopt a full-stack AI environment combining compute, storage and development tools. As AI models continue to evolve, agentic coding workflows are becoming increasingly complex. Developers are now relying on AI agents to process entire codebases, reason through tasks and execute multi-step operations without losing context. CoreWeave Cloud addresses these demands with a high-performance, low-latency inference environment, allowing coding agents to generate code, process prompts and carry out reasoning tasks more efficiently. This enables developers to experiment rapidly with new models and workflows while seamlessly scaling innovations into production environments. The integration also provides Cline users with access to a range of advanced open-weight models, including NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super, Kimi K2.5, GLM5 and MiniMax M2.5, enabling more powerful and flexible AI-driven coding capabilities. CoreWeave’s AI-native platform further ensures optimized performance for agents handling large context windows and executing complex, multi-step workflows without in...
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"We looked each other like 'what was that?' Then we went out to the yard looked down couldn't see owt so decided to go out of the gate down to the bottom of the road.
"We looked each other like 'what was that?' Then we went out to the yard looked down couldn't see owt so decided to go out of the gate down to the bottom of the road.
AMD and Samsung just made it official—their partnership is expanding well beyond the current HBM3E supply agreement into a full-stack strategic alignment covering HBM4, DDR5, and potentially Samsung foundry services for future AMD silicon. The timing is pointed: The announcement lands in the shadow of GTC 2026, where Nvidia and Samsung announced their own foundry deal for Groq chips. The memory wa...
AMD and Samsung just made it official—their partnership is expanding well beyond the current HBM3E supply agreement into a full-stack strategic alignment covering HBM4, DDR5, and potentially Samsung foundry services for future AMD silicon. The timing is pointed: The announcement lands in the shadow of GTC 2026, where Nvidia and Samsung announced their own foundry deal for Groq chips. The memory wars are heating up, and AMD is making sure it has a seat at the table. AMD and Samsung signed an MOU expanding their strategic collaboration across AI memory and computing. The agreement aligns Samsung as the primary HBM4 supplier for the Instinct MI455X GPU—AMD’s next-generation AI accelerator targeting the CDNA5 architecture—and commits Samsung to delivering DDR5 solutions optimized for 6th Gen Epyc CPUs, code-named Venice. Both product lines feed directly into the AMD Helios rack-scale platform, AMD’s answer to Nvidia’s NVL72 architecture. Samsung already holds primary HBM3E partner status for AMD, supplying memory for the Instinct MI350X and MI355X. The MOU extends that relationship into HBM4, the next-generation standard that substantially raises bandwidth and capacity requirements over HBM3E. AMD and Samsung will optimize DDR5 specifically for Venice Epyc deployments, targeting data center customers building on Helios rack infrastructure. The MOU also opens the door to a foundry partnership discussion—potentially positioning Samsung as a fabrication partner for future AMD products. That thread remains speculative, but it signals that AMD may be evaluating Samsung’s foundry as a complement or alternative to TSMC for specific product lines. Timing amplifies the strategic weight. At GTC 2026, Nvidia and Samsung confirmed a foundry deal to manufacture Groq LP30 chips on Samsung’s LP30 process. SK Hynix supplies HBM to Nvidia. Samsung, by deepening its AMD relationship, pursues a parallel track—cementing itself as a critical supplier across both GPU camps, rather than align...
While United are not discounting looking abroad in their search for a new lynchpin, the club would prefer Premier League experience. Deciding to go for proven players would certainly limit United's options, and ultimately increase the finances attached to those deals. Baleba, Wharton and Tonali are also among the players United's recruitment team have discussed and will continue to explore. One we...
While United are not discounting looking abroad in their search for a new lynchpin, the club would prefer Premier League experience. Deciding to go for proven players would certainly limit United's options, and ultimately increase the finances attached to those deals. Baleba, Wharton and Tonali are also among the players United's recruitment team have discussed and will continue to explore. One well-placed source has told BBC Sport that, via an intermediary, United have made a tentative enquiry about Brighton midfielder Baleba in recent months. However, any successful move for the Cameroonian will depend on Brighton's valuation, which reports suggest is £100m. While United accept they will have to make a massive financial outlay to land one of their preferred midfielders, whether they would be willing to match the sort of fee Brighton will be looking for is in question. Crystal Palace's Wharton is certainly admired at United, but whether he fits the sort of central-midfielder profile the club are looking for is unclear. Wharton is viewed as a player who benefits from having runners alongside him in midfield, allowing him to execute the passes that have become synonymous with his burgeoning reputation as one of England's best emerging midfield talents. Palace have explored the possibility of offering Wharton - whose contract has three years to run - a new deal with a release clause in the hope of securing his future before next season. Similarly with Tonali, Newcastle have a history of making things difficult for clubs interested in their players. Just ask Alexander Isak and Liverpool. But there is a suggestion the Italy midfielder is open to leaving St James' Park this summer, with his representatives understood to be scoping out the market to ascertain which clubs may be interested in him. Outside the Premier League, Atalanta midfielder Ederson is among the players in Europe who club recruitment staff have identified as having potential. There is a world in which U...
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images News OpenAI ( OPENAI ) continues to acquire startups, and the Microsoft-backed ( MSFT ) company announced today it plans to buy Astral in order to integrate its coding tools into Codex. Codex is OpenAI's artificial intelligence-powered coding agent, which is also one of its most popular offerings. It has more than 2M active users, and its usage has increased by five ti...
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images News OpenAI ( OPENAI ) continues to acquire startups, and the Microsoft-backed ( MSFT ) company announced today it plans to buy Astral in order to integrate its coding tools into Codex. Codex is OpenAI's artificial intelligence-powered coding agent, which is also one of its most popular offerings. It has more than 2M active users, and its usage has increased by five times year-to-date, according to OpenAI. "Astral's tools are used by millions of Python developers," said OpenAI's Codex Lead Thibault Sottiaux. "By bringing their expertise and ecosystem to OpenAI, we're accelerating our vision for Codex as the agent most capable of working across the entire software developer lifecycle." Astral builds high-performance developer tools for the Python ecosystem. Its most popular coding tools include Ruff, uv, and ty. The Brooklyn-based company was founded in 2022. "Today, AI is rapidly changing the way we build software, and the pace of that change is only accelerating," said Astral founder Charlie Marsh. "If our goal is to make programming more productive, then building at the frontier of AI and software feels like the highest-leverage thing we can do." "It is increasingly clear to me that Codex is that frontier," he added. "And by bringing Astral's tooling and expertise to OpenAI, we're putting ourselves in a position to push it forward. After joining the Codex team, we'll continue building our open source tools, explore ways they can work more seamlessly with Codex, and expand our reach to think more broadly about the future of software development." Financial details of the proposed acquisition were not revealed. Over the past several months, OpenAI has acquired Promptfoo , Software Applications , and Neptune . OpenAI's most significant competitors in the AI coding space include Cursor and Anthropic ( ANTHRO ). Cursor is in talks with investors for a funding round that would value the startup at about $50B. It is used by more than 30,000 d...
00:00 Speaker A Let's turn now to some of today's top analyst calls on Wall Street. We're watching SanDisk, Union Pacific and Five Below. 00:05 Speaker A First up, let's take a look at SanDisk. City raised its price target to $875 from $750 following Micron's results. 00:15 Speaker A Micron executives told investors on a call that they expect demand for memory storage chips to grow by roughly 20% ...
00:00 Speaker A Let's turn now to some of today's top analyst calls on Wall Street. We're watching SanDisk, Union Pacific and Five Below. 00:05 Speaker A First up, let's take a look at SanDisk. City raised its price target to $875 from $750 following Micron's results. 00:15 Speaker A Micron executives told investors on a call that they expect demand for memory storage chips to grow by roughly 20% this year alone and that tight conditions will extend beyond just this year. 00:26 Speaker A The analyst says the read through for Sandisk is that it could benefit as memory demand in data centers out paces available supply for the foreseeable future. 00:36 Speaker A The street is bullish on this one. There are 18 buys, six holds and one sell. 00:41 Speaker A Next up, Union Pacific. Evercore ISI upgraded the stock to outperform. The analyst said he thinks the railroad company is operating at an elite level, which is translating into strong volume growth and robust margins. 00:52 Speaker A He did say that the impact of higher fuel costs will be roughly 10 cents per share on the company's first quarter earnings results, but he isn't too worried. 01:03 Speaker A He expects that to be offset by much stronger revenue and a well-running network. The street likes this stock too. There are 20 buys, seven holds, and no sells. 01:10 Speaker A Last up, let's take a look at five below. William Blair upgraded the stock to outperform from market perform. 01:16 Speaker A The off-price retailer beat the street's estimates for its fourth quarter results and first quarter forecast, and the analyst said he is more and more confident that five below maintains plenty of levers to grow year-over-year and beat the street's forecast in upcoming reports. 01:29 Speaker A Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank, UBS, Guggenheim, Bernstein, Barclays and Telsey Advisor Group, just a few, all raised their price targets on the stock. 01:41 Speaker A Joe Fellman over at Telsey said that store growth and consumers' focus...
A spring job fair in Guangzhou in 2026. Photo: VCG China’s unemployment rate for youth ages 16 to 24 fell to 16.1% in February, marking an eighth straight month of decline. The sustained drop in youth joblessness — a measure that excludes enrolled students — diverges from typical seasonal patterns and offers a bright spot in a labor market where unemployment among older groups ticked up slightly d...
A spring job fair in Guangzhou in 2026. Photo: VCG China’s unemployment rate for youth ages 16 to 24 fell to 16.1% in February, marking an eighth straight month of decline. The sustained drop in youth joblessness — a measure that excludes enrolled students — diverges from typical seasonal patterns and offers a bright spot in a labor market where unemployment among older groups ticked up slightly due to holiday effects.
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) stock is back in a bear market, thanks in part to continued weakness across the tech sector. Despite the latest market-wide sell-off, though, I think investors are missing some pretty big developments from the Magnificent Seven titans, especially Tesla. With the company readying to launch its “Terafab” over the weekend, Elon Musk’s empire ... Tesla’s Terafab Could Be the Game-C...
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) stock is back in a bear market, thanks in part to continued weakness across the tech sector. Despite the latest market-wide sell-off, though, I think investors are missing some pretty big developments from the Magnificent Seven titans, especially Tesla. With the company readying to launch its “Terafab” over the weekend, Elon Musk’s empire ... Tesla’s Terafab Could Be the Game-Changer That Recharges the Stock
Micron $MU just delivered the kind of earnings report that usually earns a victory lap, a confetti cannon, and a few chest-thumping price-target hikes before breakfast. The company posted FY26 Q2 revenue of $23.86 billion, non-GAAP earnings of $12.20 per share, and a 74.9% non-GAAP gross margin, then guided the current quarter to about $33.5 billion in revenue, around $19.15 a share in non-GAAP ea...
Micron $MU just delivered the kind of earnings report that usually earns a victory lap, a confetti cannon, and a few chest-thumping price-target hikes before breakfast. The company posted FY26 Q2 revenue of $23.86 billion, non-GAAP earnings of $12.20 per share, and a 74.9% non-GAAP gross margin, then guided the current quarter to about $33.5 billion in revenue, around $19.15 a share in non-GAAP earnings, and an 81% gross margin. And... the stock still slid about 5% in extended trading, with the weakness carrying into Thursday morning, when it was down 6.5%. Investors had been waiting to see whether a company whose shares had surged nearly 65% this year — and more than quadrupled over the past 12 months — could clear a bar that had already been raised to an unhealthy altitude. Even before the report, options markets were implying roughly a 7% move by week’s end, and the stock had already blasted past the average analyst target. The company was trying to beat expectations that had already gone full Silicon Valley hallucination. Micron ’s report lives in the tension between two stories. One says AI has turned memory into one of the most important tollbooths in tech. The other says memory stocks still come with a long criminal record, and investors have seen enough booms to know that gigantic quarters can age poorly. The quarter was cartoonishly strong Micron set records across revenue, gross margin, earnings per share, and free cash flow. Revenue nearly tripled from a year earlier, while management said the quarter benefited from strong demand, tight industry supply, and broad execution across the business. The Q3 guide was even louder, with the company guiding to about $33.5 billion, far above the roughly $24.3 billion analysts were expecting. The quarter put a dollar figure on something the market has been sensing for months: AI demand is now strong enough to reshape the economics of memory. AI has turned memory into a tollbooth Micron has wandered out of the old com...