Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the performance of his company's AI chips is advancing faster than historical rates set by Moore's Law, the rubric that drove
Three things are bringing self-driving cars to the masses, the Nvidia chief said: AI models capable of driving the cars, AI training simulations that use real and created scenario
The Nvidia boss unveiled a new AI platform at CES called Cosmos, which aims to give robots and autonomous cars endless real-world scenarios to study.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang are off to a flying start in 2025 as excitement about AI sent their companies' stocks even higher.
CES 2025 not only reaffirmed the importance of artificial intelligence as a driver of change, but also consolidated Nvidia as a benchmark in this technological revolution. With advances in personal computing, video games, automotive and robotics, the company is shaping the future of multiple industries and demonstrating that AI has no limits.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang used his CES 2025 keynote to unveil the company’s next generation of GPUs and declare the rise of "Agentic AI"—a shift he says will create a multi-trillion-dollar industry and redefine how people work.
Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang unveiled new AI-driven technologies, including the GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs featuring the Blackwell chip, and introduced the Cosmos AI models for robotics. He also announced Project DIGITS,
The stock had risen to a new all-time high of $149.43 a share on Monday ahead of the chief executive’s address at CES 2025 in Las Vegas.
Project Digits is a small box available from Nvidia and “Top Partners” starting at $3000. Add a monitor, keyboard, and mouse, or buy from a partner, and you will likely have the fastest and most complete AI development workstation on the market.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote address at CES 2025 was full of AI announcements, with the 61-year-old head of the chip giant unveiling its latest line of gaming chips, an AI model to train robots and self-driving cars, its first desktop computer, and more.
For decades, Moore's Law, coined by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in 1965, has been the driving force behind computing progress. It predicted that the number of