Waterloo, Ont.-based OpenText will offer access to its Aviator AI products hosted in data centres owned by Vancouver-based Telus. (The Logic)
Waterloo, Ont.-based OpenText will offer access to its Aviator AI products hosted in data centres owned by Vancouver-based Telus. (The Logic)
Waterloo, Ont.-based OpenText will offer access to its Aviator AI products hosted in data centres owned by Vancouver-based Telus. (The Logic)
Talking point: OpenText sells information-management and automation tools to large firms and government departments. It powers its AI software with a mix of commercially available large language models (LLMs) and ones it’s developed in-house. Telus, meanwhile, is looking to capitalize on growing AI demand by installing specialized chips at its Canadian data centres. It’s also trying to buy back its consulting arm so it can offer clients AI installation services. The partnership echoes a similar tie-up between Cohere and Bell announced earlier this week; under that deal, Bell’s data centres will host Cohere’s LLMs and agent-builder system, which the telecom firm’s consulting unit will sell to clients.
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