*By Jacqueline Corba*
Salesforce has saved a seat at its executive meetings for Einstein, an artificial intelligence-powered robot developed by the cloud computing company.
"The fact that we are using our own products to really drive our forecasting, it's pretty amazing," said Bob Stutz, CEO of Salesforce's Marketing Cloud. "It is really great to have that tool that you can use every single day to run your business."
Salesforce's chief executive, Marc Benioff, has been an outspoken proponent of the company's use of A.I., and said that Einstein has [been at every weekly senior staff meeting](http://fortune.com/2018/01/25/salesforce-benioff-einstein-davos-ai/) for the last year.
Stutz said Einstein pulls his weight on a team that has grown its quarterly revenue by 41 percent year over year.
"We are on an incredible tear right now," Stutz said in an interview with Cheddar. "It's really helping customers connect with their consumers across sales, marketing, service ー it's a real growth driver for us nowadays."
For the full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/inside-salesforce-marketing-cloud-growth).
Jesse Dorogusker, the company's Hardware Lead, said the new device fits the mission to meet the needs of a broader array of vendors. The launch comes about a week after CFO Sarah Friar said she was leaving the company to become CEO of social networking site Nextdoor.
JT Genter, senior points and miles writer at The Points Guy, strapped in for the newly-revived, 18-hour direct flight between Singapore and Newark, NJ, on Singapore Airlines. He told us how he coped with what is now the longest flight in the world.
The economic opportunity for bitcoin has breathed new life into a previously retired aluminum plant in Massena, New York. Cheddar visited Coinmint to get a look inside one of the world's largest bitcoin mining operations.
Popular courier service Postmates is interviewing banks with the intention of going public in early 2019, according to the Wall Street Journal's Maureen Farrell. It's part of a changing dynamic, where red-hot tech companies are now racing to market, rather than waiting.
The worst data breach in Facebook's history was likely done by spammers, not a foreign state, according to a report. Whether that's any comfort to the tens of millions of people whose personal information ー including names, emails, religious affiliations, and locations ー was accessed in the wide-ranging attack remains to be seen.
Michael Pachter, managing director of equity research at Wedbush Securities, isn't buying into the Netflix hype even after the good Q3 earnings.
Discord, initially a popular app for in-game messaging, is launching a store with hundreds of games users can access for a monthly fee. Jason Citron, co-founder and CEO of Discord, said the company's growth is a "side effect" of gaming becoming more social.
MedMen, which just completed the largest pot-related acquisition to date in America, is preparing for the day when American drug laws catch up, said spokesman Daniel Yi.
Atari, the popular French gaming company, is now open to investments from U.S. investors through its new affiliation with with Nasdaq International. Frederic Chesnais, CEO of Atari, told Cheddar about the partnership.
Loren Padelford, Shopify vice president and general manager, had spent Wednesday morning monitoring the cannabis transactions taking place on Canadian Shopify-powered sites and said the demand was outpacing even his company's bullish forecasts.
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