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AI Surge Reshapes Tech Landscape With Big Wins and Growing Pains

Google Cloud, AI investments

As artificial intelligence (AI) takes center stage, tech giants and startups alike are reaping rewards while grappling with new challenges. From Google’s cloud boom and ServiceNow’s leadership shakeup to Pearl’s dental AI breakthrough, the industry is witnessing unprecedented growth and transformation, but the cost of innovation and the need for careful navigation are becoming increasingly apparent.

AI Boom Fuels Google’s Cloud Surge, But Costs Mount

Google’s parent Alphabet is riding high on the AI wave, with its cloud business crossing the $10 billion quarterly revenue mark for the first time. But as the tech giant pours resources into the AI arms race, investors are keeping a wary eye on mounting costs.

In its latest earnings report, Alphabet showcased the fruits of its AI push. Google Cloud revenue jumped 29% year over year to $10.3 billion, propelled by demand for AI and data analytics tools. The division also turned a $1.1 billion profit, a stark turnaround from its money-losing past.

“We are innovating at every layer of the AI stack,” CEO Sundar Pichai told investors, touting the company’s “longstanding infrastructure leadership and in-house research teams.”

But AI doesn’t come cheap. Alphabet’s research and development costs swelled to $11.9 billion, up 12% from a year earlier. The company also shuffled its AI teams, consolidating model development under Google DeepMind to “accelerate progress.”

While overall revenue climbed 14% to $84.7 billion, beating analyst estimates, the cost of that growth is under scrutiny. Alphabet’s CFO and newly minted president Ruth Porat emphasized efforts to “durably re-engineer our cost base” even as the company invests in AI.

The balancing act reflects a broader trend in Big Tech, as companies funnel billions into AI infrastructure and talent while facing pressure to maintain profit margins.

For now, Google’s core search business continues to foot the AI bill, with ad revenue up 11% to $64.6 billion. However, as the AI landscape evolves rapidly, the tech giant must prove it can translate its massive investments into sustainable growth and market leadership.

ServiceNow Rides AI Wave, But Leadership Shakeup Looms

ServiceNow is surfing the AI tsunami, but choppy waters lie ahead for the software giant’s leadership team.

The company’s second-quarter earnings report, released Wednesday (July 24), painted a rosy picture of AI-fueled growth. Subscription revenues soared 23% year-over-year to $2.54 billion, while the company inked 88 deals worth over $1 million each — a 26% jump from last year.

At the heart of this surge is ServiceNow’s AI offering, Now Assist. The generative AI tool saw its new annual contract value double from the previous quarter, including 11 deals exceeding $1 million. CEO Bill McDermott noted the company’s intention to “reinvent every workflow, in every company, in every industry with GenAI at the core.”

But the AI celebration was overshadowed by a leadership earthquake. CJ Desai, president and chief operating officer, abruptly departed following an internal investigation. The probe, which also involved government entities, centered on the hiring of a former U.S. Army chief information officer for a public sector role.

“We believe this was an isolated incident,” the company said, but the fallout has prompted a reshuffle. Chris Bedi, a ServiceNow veteran, steps in as interim chief product officer.

Despite the executive turbulence, ServiceNow is doubling down on its AI bet. The company launched its RaptorDB Lighthouse program to help customers harness massive datasets for AI applications. It also acquired Raytion, a German firm specializing in information retrieval, to boost its AI-powered search capabilities.

AI Dental Startup Pearl Bites Into $58 Million Funding Round

At your next dental checkup, the tool detecting cavities might not be the sharp explorer in your dentist’s hand but a silent algorithm analyzing your X-rays.

Pearl, a dental AI company, has just secured a $58 million Series B funding to expand its suite of AI tools. The firm, which cut its teeth on AI-assisted X-ray analysis, plans to use this capital infusion to drill down on advanced computer vision and new AI applications in treatment planning, insurance claims and dental education.

The funding comes as Pearl’s AI software gains traction globally with regulatory approvals in 120 countries. The technology aims to address inconsistencies in diagnostic accuracy, a challenge in dentistry affecting patient care quality.

“Dentistry has become an AI standard-bearer in healthcare,” Ophir Tanz, Pearl’s founder and CEO, said in a news release. “This historic funding round underscores the impact of Pearl’s capabilities.”