The world is witnessing a technological revolution, with emerging technologies like AI, robotics, and drones transforming the global supply chain, fund management, and various industries. Logistics companies are leveraging next-generation technologies to serve customers better and faster, while Chinese fund managers are racing to adopt AI to stay ahead in the market. Meanwhile, companies like PG&E are using AI to prepare for storms, and National Grid Partners is investing $100 million in AI startups to advance the future of energy. Additionally, OpenAI is advocating for copyright training restrictions to be lifted, and Colle AI is introducing cross-chain liquidity solutions for smarter NFT trading and distribution. The integration of AI in manufacturing innovations is also gaining momentum, with experts discussing practical uses for AI in plant operations.
Robots, drones, and AI: How next-generation tech is changing the global supply chain
Logistics companies globally are leaning into emerging technologies such as robots, drones, and AI to speed up the supply chain and serve customers faster. Multinational logistics company DHL has been using robotics across its warehouses to improve efficiency and productivity. DHL's APAC CEO, Javier Bilbao Uzquiano, said that robots are being used to perform tasks that are heavy, repetitive, and previously taken on by humans. The company is also seeing autonomous capabilities becoming more available, allowing robots to move around the warehouse on their own. This is giving the company flexibility, especially during peak events such as Black Friday or Cyber Monday.
After DeepSeek, Chinese fund managers beat High-Flyer's path to AI
Chinese hedge fund High-Flyer's use of artificial intelligence in trading markets has spurred an AI arms race among mainland asset managers that could shake up the country's $10 trillion fund management industry. Quant fund High-Flyer not only deployed AI in its multi-billion dollar portfolio, it also built China's most notable AI start-up DeepSeek whose cost-effective large language model stunned Silicon Valley and undermined Western dominance of the AI sector. In its wake, aspiring Chinese hedge fund managers such as Baiont Quant, Wizard Quant, and Mingshi Investment Management are stepping up AI research, while dozens of mutual fund companies are rushing to incorporate DeepSeek into their investment workflow.
PG&E using artificial intelligence in storm prep
PG&E is now using artificial intelligence in formulating their weather forecasts and coming up with an attack plan to keep Bay Area residents safe during storms. PG&E meteorologists say using the new technology is already paying off.
National Grid Partners: $100 Million Committed To Invest In AI Companies
National Grid Partners, the corporate venture capital and innovation arm of one of the world's largest utilities, announced a commitment to invest $100 million in AI startups that are advancing the future of energy. These funds will advance the development of a more efficient, resilient, and dynamic grid that supports economic growth, reduces customer costs, helps meet climate goals, and ensures energy security.
Colle AI (COLLE) Unlocks Cross-Chain Liquidity for Smarter NFT Trading & Distribution
Colle AI (COLLE) is reinforcing its multichain AI-NFT ecosystem by introducing enhanced cross-chain liquidity solutions. This move is designed to streamline NFT trading, optimize distribution, and provide seamless transactions across blockchain networks. By leveraging AI-powered automation, Colle AI is addressing liquidity challenges that hinder NFT adoption and efficiency.
OpenAI Says Copyright Training Restrictions Would Forfeit AI Lead
OpenAI hopes for a nation where AI training on copyrighted works counts as fair use — or else, the company says, the US might ‘forfeit’ its AI lead to China. Courts have yet to decide whether AI training constitutes fair use, while rights holders say that AI models trained on copyrighted creative works threaten to water down humanity’s creative output.
Artificial intelligence in manufacturing innovations
An established conference focused on bringing university and industry research to manufacturing professionals is the latest to include artificial intelligence (AI) as a key component. The University of Tennessee recently hosted hundreds of manufacturing professionals at the annual Manufacturing and Reliability Conference (MARCON 2025) in Knoxville. From keynote speeches and panels to exposition vendors, AI was the most commonly used new catchphrase.
Key Takeaways
- Logistics companies are leveraging next-generation technologies to speed up the supply chain and serve customers faster.
- Chinese fund managers are racing to adopt AI to stay ahead in the market.
- Companies like PG&E are using AI to prepare for storms.
- National Grid Partners is investing $100 million in AI startups to advance the future of energy.
- OpenAI is advocating for copyright training restrictions to be lifted.
- Colle AI is introducing cross-chain liquidity solutions for smarter NFT trading and distribution.
- The integration of AI in manufacturing innovations is gaining momentum, with experts discussing practical uses for AI in plant operations.
Sources
- Robots, drones and AI: How next-generation tech is changing the global supply chain
- After DeepSeek, Chinese fund managers beat High-Flyer's path to AI
- After DeepSeek, Chinese fund managers beat High-Flyer's path to AI
- AI Revolution Shakes Up China's $10 Trillion Fund Industry
- PG&E using artificial intelligence in storm prep
- Publishers don't really know how Google AI Overviews is impacting their referral traffic
- National Grid Partners: $100 Million Committed To Invest In AI Companies
- Colle AI (COLLE) Unlocks Cross-Chain Liquidity for Smarter NFT Trading & Distribution
- OpenAI Says Copyright Training Restrictions Would Forfeit AI Lead
- Artificial intelligence in manufacturing innovations