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
Nvidia CES 2025 shocks with RTX 50 GPUs, groundbreaking AI, and bold auto-tech partnerships. What's next for gaming and innovation?
AI reearchers and data scientists. Nvidia also announced Project DIGITS — a desktop AI supercomputer with the company’s latest Blackwell AI chip starting at $3,000 — to enable AI researchers and data scientists to work on AI models without tapping “Nvidia’s cutting-edge AI chips housed in data centers,” the Journal reported.
The Cosmos AI platform promises to revolutionize robotics and autonomous vehicles with physics-based simulations and open-source access. Will it?
Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nvidia unveiled Project Digits, a device it's calling a 'personal AI supercomputer.'
As Nvidia's stock hits a record high, the company's latest announcements suggest a strategic push to extend its AI leadership even further.
But what's inside makes it pretty special. Digits is powered by Nvidia's new GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, which delivers up to 1 petaflop of AI performance, and Nvidia teamed up with MediaTek to make the chip more energy-efficient, meaning that running it requires the kind of power you get from a standard power outlet.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the new family of foundational AI models was trained on 20 million hours of “humans walking, hands moving, manipulating things.”
Nvidia offers a range of similar devices in the same accessibility style — in December, it announced a $249 version of its Jetson computer for AI applications, targeting hobbyists and startups, called the Jetson Orin Nano Super (it handles models up to 8 billion parameters ).
The tech software giant Nvidia is the talk of the town in Las Vegas where the company has unveiled the company's new generation AI gaming chips that promise high quality, real time images.
Surprising no one, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang isn't too worried about a future filled with robots and superintelligent AI. In fact, he welcomes it. During a CES Q&A session with media and analysts, Huang was asked if he thought intelligent robots would ultimately side with humans,