Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Says AI Will Create Millionaires | Entrepreneur

In a new interview, Nvidia co-founder and CEO Jensen Huang says that AI will mint more millionaires in the next five years than the Internet did in two decades.

On a recent episode of “The All-In Podcast,” Huang said that AI technology enables people to create new things, filling in skill gaps and allowing for more chances to generate revenue.

For example, Huang noted that AI is “the greatest technology equalizer of all time” because it can turn anyone into a programmer, removing the barrier of learning a coding language like Python or C++ to be able to build an app or create a website for a business.

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Self-Funded Founder’s 3 Secrets for $25M Revenue and 2 Brands | Entrepreneur

Growing up in Toronto, Canada, Tanya Taylor, now founder of her namesake womenswear brand and a second eveningwear brand, Delphine, didn’t really know she could build a career in fashion, she says. However, as someone from a “very entrepreneurial” family, she’d always dreamed of running her own business.

“ I took for granted that our dinner table conversations were always about small businesses, the people you work with, the values you have in your work and how rewarding it is when you can build a company,” Taylor says. That foundation led her to study finance at McGill University, but Taylor couldn’t shake the “creative itch” she felt to join the fashion world. So Taylor moved to New York City, where she didn’t know anyone at the time, and applied to the Parsons AAS Fashion Design program — after which her “whole world changed.”

Taylor went on to work for Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen on their contemporary lifestyle brand, Elizabeth and James, for several years.

“ What I found so inspiring, and what I still like to think about today, is how personal they were with their design process,” Taylor recalls, “and how working for a female founder that was creating product for a customer that they could really relate to, whether through age or just lifestyle, felt fun. We weren’t guessing who this person was. It wasn’t fantasy; it was grounded in reality.”

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Deciding in the Dark: How Great Leaders Make Smart Choices in Uncertain Times | Getentrepreneurial.com

Uncertainty is not a passing storm—it’s the new climate. To thrive, leaders must abandon the illusion of perfect information and instead adopt a mindset of adaptability, a skillset of structured judgment, and toolsets that support iterative decision-making.

Core Insights & Impact

1. Embrace Probabilistic Thinking

Mindset: Replace “What will happen?” with “What could happen, and how likely is each scenario?”

Skillset: Estimate outcomes based on likelihoods, not certainties—consider a range of scenarios and update beliefs as new data emerges.

Toolset: Use frameworks like decision trees or Bayesian updating.

Impact: Reduces overconfidence and helps teams make informed bets rather than risky leaps.

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Sleep with the Fear: How Perplexity’s CEO Turns Anxiety into Advantage | Getentrepreneurial.com

Aravind Srinivas, co-founder and CEO of Perplexity (now valued at $14 billion), says his secret to success is not launching — but living — with the constant fear that your idea will be copied by Big Tech. This fear becomes fuel for relentless innovation, urgency, and building unique defensibility.

Core Insights & Impact

1. Normalize the Fear of Being Copied

Mindset: Accept that if your product becomes a hit, competitors—especially large, resource-rich incumbents—will copy it.

Impact: Instead of paralysis, this mindset shifts fear into a strategic advantage, prompting continuous iteration and improvement.

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China Debuts World’s First 500 MW Impulse Turbine, Redefining Hydropower Scale | Cool Business Ideas

Harbin Electric has unveiled the world’s first 500?MW impulse turbine, a massive hydroelectric marvel with a 6.2?m diameter and 80-ton weight, engineered for the Datang?Zala Hydropower Station in Tibet. It’s the biggest and most powerful impulse turbine ever built—but it won’t be generating electricity until its 2028 debut.

Impact:

A New Record in Hydropower Engineering Each turbine—including its 21 precision water buckets—is forged from martensitic steel and weighs approximately 80 tons, claiming the title of the largest and highest-capacity impulse runner globally. Unmatched Efficiency Gains Designed for the high-head Datang Zala site (2,201?ft drop), advancements in bucket design boost efficiency from 91% to 92.6%, resulting in an extra ~190?MWh of electricity daily. Clean Energy with Significant Emission Reductions Once operational, the plant’s 1,000?MW capacity is expected to generate ~4 billion kWh annually—the equivalent of burning 1.3 million tons of coal and avoiding approximately 3.4 million tons of CO? per year. Fully Homegrown Innovation From design and forging to welding, China Datang and Harbin Electric executed all processes domestically. Cutting-edge welding tech—3D metrology, simulation, fatigue-resistant joints—was critical for managing the turbine’s sheer size and stress thresholds. Strategic Clean-Energy Leap The turbine marks China’s leadership in hydropower innovation and aligns with its goal of carbon neutrality by 2060. The Datang Zala project is also a flagship for high-head impulse hydropower in complex terrain.

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Mercedes Turns Cars into Cars–offices: CLA Models Now Support Teams, Copilot & Intune | Cool Business Ideas

Mercedes-Benz is redefining the commuter experience: the latest CLA allows drivers to participate in Microsoft Teams video calls using the in-car camera—legally and safely while moving—and includes integrated Microsoft 365 Copilot and Intune management, positioning the vehicle as an official “third workspace.”

Impact:

Mercedes and Microsoft extend the boundaries of vehicle functionality, transforming cars into productivity hubs. Here’s how:

On-the-Go Meetings Drivers can now join Teams video calls via the in-car camera during transit, with the screen automatically blacking out shared content for safety compliance. AI-Powered Ride Assistance Integration of Microsoft 365 Copilot lets drivers handle emails and prep for meetings using voice commands—without needing to touch a device. Corporate-Grade Security With Microsoft Intune built into Mercedes’ MB.OS platform, cars can be managed like corporate devices, supporting enrollment, policies, and remote wiping.

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3 things you can do with the Z Fold 7 you can’t do with ordinary phones | Mashable

Samsung’s latest tablet-style foldable phone is full of possibilities.

The Galaxy Z Fold 7 is finally here, and I think it’s the best foldable Samsung has produced yet. Samsung made this year’s edition of its more expensive foldable the thinnest and lightest it’s ever been, with two huge displays and lots of versatility in what you can do with them.

Although a new CNET survey says the majority of people are not interested in owning a foldable phone, you still naturally may be wondering what sets this phone apart from something more conventional, like a Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra or an iPhone 16. Allow me to explain. While some of these features have been available on foldables for some time and aren’t new this year, they still showcase what a Z Fold can do for you that most other devices can’t.

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UK sticks it to cybercriminals with ban on ransomware payments | Mashable

You’ve heard the phrase, “We don’t negotiate with terrorists.” Well, the UK government seems to have a similar approach in mind for dealing with cybercriminals.

Today, the British government announced it will introduce new cybersecurity measures to prohibit public sector and critical national infrastructure organizations from making ransomware payments to cybercriminals.

In ransomware attacks, cybercriminals steal data or take control of critical technology infrastructure, then demand ransom payments to restore access.

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Colbert’s first post-cancellation ‘Late Show’ is tonight — will he speak out against CBS? | CNN Business

Network late-night shows have been losing viewers for years, but “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” is primed for a ratings bump right now.

That’s because Monday night will be Colbert’s first new episode since CBS shocked the media sector by announcing “The Late Show” will end next May.

Colbert is slated to have two Hollywood stars, Sandra Oh and Dave Franco, as his guests. Later in the week, he will interview Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro.

Last week’s cancellation announcement sparked speculation among fans that CBS might have pulled the plug for political reasons, given Colbert’s status as an outspoken critic of President Trump. The network, however, said it was “purely a financial decision” in a declining broadcast industry.

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Extreme weather caused by climate change is raising food prices worldwide, study says | CNN Business

Extreme weather caused by climate change is driving up the prices of basic food products worldwide and posing wider risks to society, a new study has found.

The cost of a wide range of goods – from potatoes in Britain to coffee in Brazil – saw dramatic spikes in recent years due to weather conditions that were “so extreme they exceeded all historical precedent prior to 2020,” according to the study led by Maximillian Kotz of the Barcelona Supercomputer Center.

Previous studies have examined how high temperatures have affected the cost of food produce in the long term, by impacting yields and hitting supply chains. The new research, published Monday, looked at 16 examples across 18 countries around the world where prices spiked in the short term as a result of either extreme heat, drought, or heavy precipitation between 2022 and 2024.

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