Nvidia was the most remarkable technology story of 2024 — both in terms of its products and impact on the stock market. The company’s strategic advancements in data-center GPUs and networking; its growth and ambitions in services;
Set to be released on January 31st, the new Nvidia RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 are ready to be scooped up, but will you be able to get one?
Nvidia's chief executive Jensen Huang said on Friday he will not be attending U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration, but will instead be "on the road" celebrating the Lunar New Year with employees and their families.
Meanwhile, a slew of other tech executives including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are reportedly set to attend the events on Monday.
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." Considering this, where will Nvidia stock be in one year? Let's find out.
Nvidia's demand for advanced packaging from TSMC remains strong though the kind of technology it needs is changing, the U.S. AI chip giant's CEO Jensen Huang said on Thursday, after he was asked whether the company was cutting orders.
Nvidia ( NVDA 0.21%) is one of the most widely followed stocks today, and it's easy to see why. Its lead in the artificial intelligence (AI) accelerator market supercharged its revenue growth and made it the largest semiconductor stock, as measured by market cap, next to Apple.
Quantum computing stocks were red-hot recently, but Jensen Huang just offered optimistic investors a reality check.
Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang is expected to miss the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump on Jan. 20, bucking a trend among high-profile US technology leaders.
The test was also a testament to the power of Nvidia’s upcoming multi-frame generation. With DLSS 4 and 4x frame generation enabled, as well as DLSS set to Performance, the RTX 5090 was hitting a whopping 290 fps and over 40ms of latency. This was with Nvidia’s Reflex 1, as Reflex 2 wasn’t available for this test.
Investors were not impressed by Nvidia's quarterly performance and outlook even though it handily beat Wall Street's expectations thanks to the booming demand for its artificial intelligence (AI) chips.
It’s maybe like the Matrix in that it’s indistinguishable from the real world. That’s the key. Because at some point you want to transfer the robot brain into the actual robot to operate in the real world. And if what it’s trained on is a cartoony, non-realistic version, then it’s not going to operate well.