Tom Taulli

Tom Taulli

Expertise: Artificial intelligence, cloud computing, cybersecurity

Education: BA, Cal Poly Pomona; JD, Whittier Law School

Awards & Accomplishments: IRS Enrolled Agent; California insurance license

Tom Taulli is the author of various books. They include Artificial Intelligence Basics and the Robotic Process Automation Handbook. His upcoming book is called Generative AI: How ChatGPT and other AI Tools Will Revolutionize Business.

Besides his writing, Tom has authored courses for PluralSight, Apress and O’Reilly Publishing. And yes, they are about topics like AI and cloud computing.

Tom currently advises various early stage companies about AI. He also is an angel investor.

Before this, Tom founded tech companies like ExamWeb, WebIPO and Hypermart, which was sold to InfoSpace.

Recent Articles

PROS Holdings: A Way to Play Commodity Inflation?

PROS Holdings gaining notice -- and share value -- thanks to its pricing software, which helps companies maximize margins.

The Next Big Thing: Furniture?

The high-end of the market continues to attract new players. Here's how investors can play the furniture trend.

LinkedIn: Will Rivals Cut the Hefty Valuation?

Upstart companies are trying to flirt with LinkedIn's professional-social media mix, but LNKD is too entrenched for many to make an immediate dent.

Google Flights: Prepared for Takeoff?

Google Flights might not make a dent in full-service travel brands like Priceline and Expedia, but search-based services like Kayak and Microsoft's Bing could suffer.

Could Tumblr Be the Next Facebook?

Tumblr, one of social networking's newer sites, is posting big numbers that dwarf other big-timers.

Veteran Dot-Commer Takes Aim at Pandora

A new service by Clear Channel turns up the competitive heat and is a direct assault on Pandora.

Best Buy Battered By Slumping Profit

The stock takes a hit after the company's uninspiring earnings report.

Investing Theory Smackdown: Mark Cuban vs. John Bogle

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban sounds off against "buy and hold" and "asset allocation." So what does he recommend?

Could Lululemon Be a Lemon?

Lululemon is on the right course, high-end athletic wear is expendable in a worsening economy, and growing competition won't help its cause, either.

The Investment World’s New Rock Star

This money-making phenom has seen a 25.3% return on his fund this year, and an average annual gain of 15% since 1991. Who is he?