Tech
Chemistry Ventures is raising $500M for its second fund
Chemistry Ventures, the VC firm launched two years ago by Bessemer, Index Ventures and Andreessen Horowitz alums, is raising $500 million for its second fund, according to an SEC filing.
Founded by Mark Goldberg, Ethan Kurzweil and Kristina Shen, Chemistry launched with a $350 million fund, and invests in early-stage startups building developer tools, fintech and infrastructure. Its portfolio companies include Granola, Decagon, Persona, Serval and Nova Intelligence.
Goldberg previously worked at Index Ventures, Kurzweil with Bessemer, and Shen with a16z. The trio launched the firm to combine their experience working at large venture capital firms.
The Wall Street Journal reports that the second fund is already oversubscribed and the fundraise is expected to close soon.
Chemistry did not immediately return a request for comment.
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Tech
Microsoft joins AI cost-cutting trend by relying more on its own models
As AI costs continue to rise, companies are looking for ways to cut back. The most recent example is Microsoft, which has reportedly begun to deploy a cost-savings strategy by relying less on software from OpenAI and Anthropic and instead deploying its own in-house models.
Indeed, when it comes to two of its most widely used programs — Excel and Word — Microsoft has begun to use its homemade MAI models to respond to a certain percentage of user prompts, Bloomberg reported Tuesday. In the past, the company had advertised the fact that large parts of Office 365 are powered by models from both OpenAI and Anthropic.
While Microsoft still relies on those third-party models, it has also increasingly sought to stand up its own AI agents. Last month, at its annual Build conference, the company announced the launch of seven new MAI models, including an agentic coder and a text-to-image generator.
When reached for comment by TechCrunch, Microsoft said that it had nothing further to share.
Microsoft’s apparent cutbacks are part of a broader trend. After a brief blitz of “tokenmaxxing” earlier this year, the last few months have seen a news cycle awash in stories about tech companies acting significantly more thrifty. Other large companies — like Amazon, Uber, Meta, and Accenture — have also reportedly made moves to curb spending.
The immense cost of providing and buying AI services has become a controversial part of the industry. The sticker shock has gotten so bad in some parts of Silicon Valley that some companies are reportedly looking to Chinese models for more affordable agentic solutions — despite some concerns over potential security issues.
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Tech
AI Data Centers Face a Networking Bottleneck as GPU Clusters Grow
AI data centers are running into a network bottleneck as GPU clusters expand. For infrastructure teams, fabric design, congestion control, and interoperability now matter as much as power, cooling, and accelerator supply.
The post AI Data Centers Face a Networking Bottleneck as GPU Clusters Grow appeared first on TechRepublic.
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Tech
The Neuron Launches AI Training Platform for Everyday Professionals
The Neuron Academy launched on July 7 with self-paced AI courses for professionals who want to use ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini more confidently.
The post The Neuron Launches AI Training Platform for Everyday Professionals appeared first on TechRepublic.
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