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Frore Systems is making a bold claim in the AI cooling wars. Their new LiquidJet Nexus coldplate, designed for Nvidia's Vera Rubin and Blackwell Ultra accelerators, promises ten percent more token generation than competing liquid-cooling solutions. In a market where inference speed translates directly to revenue, ten percent is not a rounding error.
Shifting from silicon to neurons, Jeff Bezos is backing a five hundred million dollar bet that the brain holds the secret to better artificial intelligence. The startup Flourish, now valued at two and a half billion dollars, wants to study real biological neurons under the microscope, searching for what they're calling the brain's core algorithm. It's a fascinating wager that nature already solved the problem we're trying to engineer.
And on two wheels, Segway's new Myon electric bike arrives loaded with app-controlled security, electronic shifting, and radar alerts. Wired's review raises the right question — not whether the technology works, but whether riders actually want this much intelligence managing their commute. Sometimes the smartest product is the one that knows when to stay quiet.
Keep surfing. Tech Beat out.
