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At CES 2025, a major annual tech conference in Las Vegas, CEO Jensen Huang laid out how the world's second-most valuable firm is bringing technology that powers its lucrative data center AI chips ...
One of the AI leaders is Nvidia's (NASDAQ: NVDA) CEO and founder, Jensen Huang. Because Nvidia makes the hardware that powers these AI models, Huang has a great feel for the pulse of the industry ...
There's a good reason Huang is talking up physical AI. While Nvidia has grown by roughly $3.3 trillion since the start of the generative AI boom, thanks to high demand for its chips needed to ...
The need for more computing power to train and run advanced AI systems has buoyed demand for Nvidia's Grace Hopper chips such as the H200, which was first used in OpenAI's GPT-4o - a multimodal ...
The great news is this success story may be far from over. Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang, speaking at CES earlier this month, said AI is progressing at an "incredible pace."
Huang said there are three elements in scaling and that each continues to advance. If the foundation models driving the panicked rush toward generative AI stop improving, Nvidia will have a problem.
Huang said Musk, an Nvidia customer, has a great advantage in collecting real-world data, citing Tesla’s AI-enabled factories, autonomous vehicle algorithms, and large fleet of cars.
According to Huang, Japan, Canada, France, and a number of other regions are already setting up their own sovereign AI systems. Of course, sovereign AI isn’t the only thing driving Nvidia’s sales.