Microsoft’s Thailand AI Bet Tests Capital Intensity And Long Term Returns - simplywall.st
<a href="https://news.google.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?oc=5" target="_blank">Microsoft’s Thailand AI Bet Tests Capital Intensity And Long Term Returns</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">simplywall.st</font>
Could not retrieve the full article text.
Read on GNews AI Microsoft →Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
capitalVCs are covering expenses like rent for young college dropouts founding AI startups; Antler: average AI unicorn founder age fell from 40 in 2020 to 29 in 2024 (Kate Clark/Wall Street Journal)
Kate Clark / Wall Street Journal : VCs are covering expenses like rent for young college dropouts founding AI startups; Antler: average AI unicorn founder age fell from 40 in 2020 to 29 in 2024 Venture capitalists are stepping in to cover expenses like rent while dropouts from Harvard to Stanford chase their startup dreams
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.
More in Releases

HHS Announces Request for Information to Harness Artificial Intelligence to Deflate Health Care Costs and Make America Healthy Again - HHS.gov
HHS Announces Request for Information to Harness Artificial Intelligence to Deflate Health Care Costs and Make America Healthy Again HHS.gov

Stop Writing AI Prompts From Scratch: A Developer's System for Reusable Prompt Templates
You open Cursor. You need to refactor a service. You type something like: "Hey, can you refactor this function to be cleaner?" The AI gives you something mediocre. You tweak the prompt. Try again. The output improves. You get what you need — but you've spent four minutes writing a prompt you'll write again tomorrow, and next week, and every time a similar task comes up. This is the hidden tax on AI-assisted development. Not API costs. Not context limits. Prompt reinvention. Most developers treat every AI interaction as a blank slate. Senior engineers don't. They've built systems. This article is about building that system: a reusable prompt library that makes your AI interactions faster, more consistent, and dramatically higher quality. Why Most Developer Prompts Fail Before building a sys

Show HN: Ray – an open-source AI financial advisor that runs in your terminal
I've been using this daily for 4 months and figured others might find it useful. This is my first open source project so would love any feedback. Ray connects to your bank via Plaid, stores everything in an encrypted local SQLite database, and lets you ask questions about your finances in natural language. No cloud, no account, your data is stored on your machine. Before anything reaches the LLM, all PII is stripped — your name, companies, transaction details are redacted and replaced with tokens, then rehydrated locally in the response. The AI never sees who you are. Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47644133 Points: 6 # Comments: 2

I Gave Claude Access to My Desktop Outlook Without Touching the Microsoft API
How a 150-line Python script using macOS Accessibility APIs turned my Mac’s Outlook app into a fully AI-readable inbox no OAuth, no permissions headache, no Graph API token. Every few months I try again to get Claude to help me with my emails. Every few months I run into the same wall: Microsoft’s Graph API requires an Azure app registration, an OAuth flow, admin consent for enterprise tenants, and — depending on your company’s IT policy — a support ticket that takes two weeks to resolve. By then, I’ve given up and gone back to manually copy-pasting emails into Claude. Then I found a different angle. macOS has had a powerful accessibility API since the early days of OS X. It’s the same system that screen readers use. Any app running on your Mac including Outlook exposes its entire UI eleme




Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!