At CES, cutting-edge processors from Nvidia and other companies are introducing powerful AI capabilities to desktop computers.

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AI

The CES consumer electronics show has a knack for shaking Silicon Valley from its festive hibernation, and major chip manufacturers like Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices, and Qualcomm were more than ready to step up.

It was all about enabling artificial intelligence at the desktop and that’s going to require serious hardware horsepower. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang even upgraded his usual leather jacket for the occasion.

Still, this year AI is likely to be all about the data — how to create and leverage it — so check out Tony Baer’s predictions for data in the coming year to see what’s coming.

It looks like money will keep flowing into AI in 2025, as Anthropic reportedly raised an additional $2 billion in a bid to cement its status among the AI front-runners. Lest you thought Google wouldn’t be one of those front-runners, it continues to make up for lost ground in AI with world model research, AI audio news summaries and AI agents for retail.

AI is also continuing to drive a data center boom, with Microsoft, AWS, private equity and more scrambling to build them.

But 2025 also will present more and more examples of how AI can be used for nefarious means: The Cybertruck bomber used ChatGPT to plan his attack. Was this AI’s social media moment?

Speaking of social media, Meta axes fact-checking in favor of community notes — which are months away at least. Tech’s titans aren’t just bowing to Trump. They’re showing their true colors.

Oops. Jensen Huang tanked quantum computing stocks after saying working quantum machines are up to 20 years away.

The consolidation of cybersecurity continues with at least four deals this past week. Maybe consolidation will extend to semiconductors as well, amid reports that SoftBank may buy Arm chipmaker Ampere.

CES: A showcase of AI innovations, paired with a sprinkle of semiconductor technology.

Artificial Intelligence and Data: The Spotlight Returns to Data

Tony Baer’s annual must-read predictions for what comes next in all things data: Data 2025 outlook: AI drives a renaissance of data

Financial matters

AI dominates global venture funding as other sectors faced challenges in Q4 And the U.S. is absolutely crushing it in AI funding.

Innovative models and offerings

Within the business landscape: AI drives a surge in data center growth

Financial matters

Private equity firm Cuadrilla Capital acquired network automation firm Gluware for an undisclosed amount

Latest offerings

Cyber Pulse: The Year of Mergers and Acquisitions Has Arrived

Fresh offerings

Attacks & advice

In other tech news: Meta submits to Trump once more.

Meta announces broad changes to fact-checking, content moderation policies The craven nature of this change as Trump gets ready to take office is obvious if only from the fact that Meta is axing the content moderation team months before launching the promised community notes. As Axios put it, “Under Meta’s newly relaxed moderation policies, women can be compared to household objects, ethnic groups can be called ‘filth,’ users can call for the exclusion of gay people from certain professions and people can refer to a transgender or non-binary person as an ‘it.’”

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang tanks quantum computing stocks after saying useful quantum machines are up to two decades off.

Billionaire Frank McCourt’s Project Liberty proposes bid for TikTok’s US assets

Within the realm of blockchain technology

Arrivals and departures, along with a farewell.

Tenable Chairman and CEO Amit Yoran died unexpectedly Jan. 3 after a battle with cancer.

Francis deSouza is Google Cloud’s new chief operating officer. He co-founded AI research startup Synth Labs last year after numerous stints at Symantec, Illumina and others (per CRN).

Salesforce moves Slack Chief Revenue Officer Kaylin Voss over to be EVP of Agentforce and Data Cloud

Wiz appoints former Tanium co-CEO Fazal Merchant president and chief financial officer.

Starburst appoints former Pluralsight and Snowflake vet Lisa Luscap chief marketing officer.

Microsoft plans a round of performance-based layoffs, reportedly about 1% of its staff, meaning several thousand given that about 228,000 people work there (per Geekwire).

Citrix parent Cloud Software Group confirms layoffs (per CRN).

What comes next?

Jan. 14-15: Cyber Resiliency Summit, a Super Studio event from theCUBE.