Nvidia, Jensen Huang
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There are questions about how much upside is really implied by Nvidia’s new outlook. In the meantime, investors may be looking for clearer growth opportunities elsewhere.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang highlighted the importance of AI tokens at the GTC conference, framing them as essential for AI pricing and corporate budgets.
The Christmas Eve agreement—billed as Nvidia’s biggest deal in its three-decade history—landed at a precarious moment for Groq. Now Nvidia is betting on Groq’s inference-speed tech inside a newly announced chip platform.
Phaidra, a startup using artificial intelligence to make data center operations more energy efficient, this week announced key collaborations with Nvidia, CoreWeave and Applied Digital.
The company announced that its Vera Rubin Space Module, which includes the IGX Thor and Jetson Orin platforms, delivers up to 25x more AI compute for space-based inferencing. This will enable next-generation compute for orbital data centers, advanced geospatial intelligence processing, and autonomous space operations, Nvidia said.
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Nvidia is preparing a version of its Groq artificial-intelligence chips that can be sold to the Chinese market, two sources familiar with the matter say.
Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang said the company is firing up manufacturing of H200 AI accelerators for customers in China, a sign of progress in the chipmaker’s effort to reenter the vital market.
He went on to claim that this array of new products will help Nvidia sell over $1trn-worth of AI-related hardware in the coming years. Among engineers, the reaction was enthusiastic. Among investors,
Also at GTC, the company unveils NemoClaw, its toolkit for running the fast-rising, open-source OpenClaw AI agent locally.
By Karen Freifeld, Max A. Cherney and Liam Mo NEW YORK, March 17 (Reuters) - Nvidia has won Beijing's approval to sell its second-most powerful artificial intelligence chips to China and is also preparing a version of the Groq AI chip that can be sold to the Chinese market,
Nvidia surely thought it was doing a good thing for gamers by “upgrading” the faces of our favorite video game characters. But that just shows how much the company has lost the plot. Regardless of how it works,