At 2am, Kim, a 25-year-old office worker, opens a site designed to look like a food delivery app, though he has no plan to order. He chooses menu items, drops them into a cart and simulates the experience of placing an order. “It somehow feels like I actually ordered something,” he said. Kim said the habit helps him resist late-night cravings. Advertisement “There are many times when I crave food ...
At 2am, Kim, a 25-year-old office worker, opens a site designed to look like a food delivery app, though he has no plan to order. He chooses menu items, drops them into a cart and simulates the experience of placing an order. “It somehow feels like I actually ordered something,” he said. Kim said the habit helps him resist late-night cravings. Advertisement “There are many times when I crave food late at night but hold back to save money. It feels like a real delivery app, so I somehow keep looking at it,” Kim said, referring to a site whose name is a spoof of a food delivery app. “I don’t end up ordering anything, but it feels like it relieves a little stress,” Kim said. Advertisement
Investors see Corsair’s AI move as a shift from gaming hardware toward enterprise AI infrastructure. In this photo illustration, the Corsair Gaming logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen. (Photo Illustration by Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loadi...
Investors see Corsair’s AI move as a shift from gaming hardware toward enterprise AI infrastructure. In this photo illustration, the Corsair Gaming logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen. (Photo Illustration by Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Last week, Corsair launched CORSAIR PRO, a lineup of AI workstations and servers using NVIDIA Grace Blackwell technology. The growing demand for secure, in-house AI systems has created an opportunity for Corsair to leverage its expertise in cooling and high-performance hardware. Corsair’s Q1 EPS of $0.27 beat estimates of $0.18, while adjusted EBITDA jumped 58%. Corsair Gaming (CRSR) extended its powerful four-day rally into overnight Tuesday as investors’ confidence in the gaming hardware company’s new AI offerings, strong fiscal first-quarter (Q1) earnings, and growth prospects remained steady. Also, market participants pointed to the company’s elevated short interest as a factor that could intensify upward momentum in the shares. Read Next Loading... Loading... CRSR’s Enterprise AI Expansion Changes Narrative Last week, Corsair introduced CORSAIR PRO, a portfolio of AI-focused workstations and localized server systems aimed at businesses seeking secure, on-premise computing solutions. The new systems use NVIDIA Grace Blackwell technology and are designed for advanced AI tasks such as AI model training, data processing, and computer vision. The launch surprised portions of the technology market because Corsair had traditionally been associated with gaming accessories, PC components, and streaming hardware. Businesses have recently shown rising interest in operating artificial intelligence models internally rather than relying entirely on large public cloud providers. Companies managing sensitive information want tighter co...