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Asana to Launch in Nigeria to Use AI to Revolutionize Workflows

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The top work management platform for businesses, Asana, has announced its official launch in Lagos. The event will take place in Ikoyi, Lagos, during the first week of June, with the theme “Future-Proofing Nigerian Workflows: AI That Works.” The event is expected to herald in a new era of productivity and efficiency for Nigerian firms, according to the brand’s Nigerian promoters.

“Asana continues to grow its global presence and enable teams to accomplish their objectives more effectively. This major milestone is the company’s introduction into the Nigerian market through its West African partner, Novotech Works.”

Asana is excited to be introduced to Nigeria and help regional companies streamline their operations and boost output. Asana Africa’s Country Director, Rilwon Jaiyeola, stated, “Our platform is designed to help teams collaborate effectively and achieve their objectives with ease.”

Asana, which began operations in April 2012 after being founded in 2008, has been leading the way in changing workplaces all over the world. The platform’s logical AI-driven solutions are well known for helping businesses operate more efficiently and accomplish more. World-renowned companies including Sony Music, Zoom, Dow Jones, Discovery Digital Studios, and Dior are among Asana’s remarkable clientele worldwide.

Zoom saves an incredible 133 work weeks annually, while Sony Music used Asana to triple its creative production capability. Thanks to Asana, Discovery Digital Studios creates thousands of films every month and Dow Jones Marketing reduces their workweek by ten percent. With the help of Asana’s skills, Christian Dior has expedited the launch of its fragrances.

Asana is about to introduce these revolutionary advantages to Nigerian workplaces. Project management, teamwork, and task tracking are just a few of the issues that Asana’s cutting-edge features and AI-driven solutions are intended to address. Businesses in Nigeria stand to gain from Asana’s increased productivity, optimized workflows, and markedly decreased administrative workloads.

Attendees at the breakfast event will get the chance to learn more about Asana’s features and benefits from the company, which has offices in Tokyo, Reykjavík, San Francisco, New York, Dublin, Sydney, Vancouver, and Tokyo. Discussions regarding the application of AI to future-proof Nigerian workflows will also be held by participants. Experts in the field will participate in the panel discussion.

Business observers predict that in addition to commemorating Asana’s arrival in Lagos, the event will provide guests a personal look at what it can do. Additionally, it’s anticipated that entrepreneurs and business executives will get together to discuss how Asana can be used to improve productivity, address current workplace problems, and prepare operations for the future.

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Perplexity, an AI business, adds retail capabilities as search competition gets more intense

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Perplexity, an artificial intelligence search firm, opened a shopping hub on Monday to draw people to its platform in an effort to challenge Alphabet-owned Google’s hegemony in the search engine market.

Supported by Amazon (AMZN.O) founder Jeff Bezos and top AI chipmaker Nvidia (NVDA.O), the company launches a new tab and will provide users with product cards that display pertinent goods in answer to shopping-related queries.

According to the company, each card offers product facts in an eye-catching manner.

Shopify (SHOP.TO), one of the platform integrations that powers the new functionality, provides access to up-to-date and pertinent information on products from companies on the Canadian e-commerce platform worldwide that ship to the United States.

The goal of e-commerce platforms has been to attract more merchants by utilizing more AI-powered solutions.

‘Snap to Shop’ is a visual search engine featured in Perplexity’s online shopping rollout that displays products based on users’ pictures of an item.

The features will initially be introduced in the US before moving on to other regions; however, no timeframe has been given.

Additionally, Perplexity is launching a “Merchant Program” to enable shops to communicate with the company about its products.

Earlier in November, Reuters reported that the business was raising $3 billion in new funding.

Since the generative AI pioneer added a number of new search features to ChatGPT, OpenAI has become a direct rival of Perplexity, which has been seeking to broaden its product line.

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HealthKart in India is worth $500 Million in New investment

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A fresh all-secondary investment of $153 million has raised the valuation of Indian nutrition startup HealthKart to almost $500 million, according to two people with knowledge of the situation.

Private equity companies ChrysCapital and Motilal Oswal co-led the investment, which was one of the biggest for an Indian consumer business this year. Avendus Capital provided financial advice. The round also included participation from asset manager Neo Group and A91 Partners. At one point, the startup was worth $350 million.

According to the sources, some of the original investors in the firm sold their shares to the new backers. Peak XV, formerly Sequoia India and Southeast Asia, has sold the shares it purchased for around $15 million for nearly $120 million, effectively exiting the firm. Temasek, Sofina, and financial management IIFL are also supporters of HealthKart.

HealthKart, a company based in Gurugram, announced $118.5 million in revenue for the fiscal year that concluded in March 2024, solidifying its standing as the biggest consumer nutrition platform in India. The firm offers health accessories and protein supplements for sale.

The 13-year-old company, which split off from online drugstore startup 1MG, announced on Thursday that it is repurchasing $6.5 million worth of employee shares. In the fiscal year that concluded in March, the startup was EBITDA profitable.

“The Indian sports nutrition market, currently underpenetrated, is expected to expand due to a rise in fitness awareness and the increasing importance of nutrition and protein,” said Arpit Vinayak, VP at ChrysCapital, in a statement.

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OpenAI once contemplated purchasing a business that developed AI chips. The cerebras

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Recent court documents reveal that OpenAI had contemplated purchasing Cerebras, an AI chip manufacturer preparing to go public.

According to new evidence in Elon Musk’s continuing case against OpenAI, OpenAI was considering acquiring Cerebras in or around 2017—a year after Cerebras was founded and only a few years after OpenAI started operations.

Ilya Sutskever, a former chief scientist and co-founder of OpenAI, proposed purchasing Cerebras through Musk’s electric vehicle business, Tesla, in an email sent to Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Musk had some control over OpenAI’s course at the time and was financially invested in the company.

In September 2017, Sutskever wrote, “In the event we decide to buy Cerebras, my strong sense is that it’ll be done through Tesla,” “But why do it this way if we could also do it from within OpenAI? Specifically, the concern is that Tesla has a duty to shareholders to maximize shareholder return, which is not aligned with OpenAI’s mission. So the overall result may not end up being optimal for OpenAI.”

Sutskever lists a number of Cerebras-related agenda items in a previous email sent in July 2017 to Musk and OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman, who is currently the company’s president: “Negotiate merger terms with Cerebras” and “More due diligence with Cerebras.”

Although it’s unclear from the exhibits why, the merger deal would eventually fail. Additionally, OpenAI would put its chip goals on hold for years.

Based in Sunnyvale, California, Cerebras creates specialized hardware for AI model execution and training. The company asserts that its chips are quicker and more effective for AI workloads than Nvidia’s flagship products.

Cerebras has received $715 million in venture funding and is apparently looking to use the IPO to almost treble its $4 billion valuation. But it has a lot of obstacles to overcome. Eighty-seven percent of Cerebras’ revenue in the first half of 2024 came from a single Abu Dhabi company, G42, whose longstanding ties to China have alarmed U.S. politicians. Having pled guilty to evading financial controls while serving as a vice president at the publicly traded business Riverstone Networks, Andrew Feldman, the CEO of Cerebras, likewise had a troubled past.

The transaction might have been advantageous to both businesses if it had taken place. OpenAI may have had an important advantage in its competition to develop in-house chips, while Cerebras would have avoided the road to a challenging IPO.

Since Nvidia holds a significant portion of the market for processors with AI optimization, OpenAI has long aimed to lessen its need on the company. OpenAI is under pressure to lower the cost of training, fine-tuning, and operating models, even though it is late to the in-house chip game—Google and Amazon Web Services, among others, have long provided chips made for AI workloads. It could be able to achieve the necessary savings by having its own chips.

At one point, OpenAI was thinking about being an acquisition target and intended to build a network of chip manufacturing factories. However, IBM has apparently shelved such plans in favor of rapidly expanding a team of engineers and chip designers and collaborating with semiconductor companies TSMC and Broadcom to develop an AI processor for running models. It might show up as early as 2026.

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