Dr Seena Rejal examines the implications of increased competition in the semiconductor market on AI development.
Big Tech is buying up Nvidia chips to train ever-larger AI models. As technology evolves, the spoils may spread to AMD, Intel, and start-ups.
CEO Elon Musk’s aggressive pursuit of artificial intelligence chips for his supercomputer has pushed Nvidia (NVDA) to its production limits.
This company could be a great pick for investors seeking to profit from the next wave of AI. In Nvidia's third-quarter earnings conference call on Nov. 20, Huang stated, "The next wave of AI are [sic] enterprise AI and industrial AI." He added ...
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said he liked to "torture" his AI in order to learn things. Here are five follow-up questions he uses.
Musk’s xAI and Meta are among those building super clusters of computer servers with as many as 100,000 of Nvidia’s most advanced chips.
Nvidia's new model was trained on open-source data, and the company said it is still debating whether and how to release it publicly.
Last week, Nvidia Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) issued its third quarter results, topping both sales and earnings estimates as well as posting a better-than-expected current quarter guidance as its end-customers,
The cloud computing giant won’t dislodge the incumbent anytime soon but is hoping to reduce its reliance on the chipmaker.
In an exclusive interview on FOX Business, Nvidia founder, CEO and President Jensen Huang expanded on "the big idea" behind the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, what it means for human jobs and the company’s plan to ramp up its chip production.
Nvidia unveiled a new AI model on Monday called Fugatto that can create sounds, music, and clone and modify voices, based on the user's audio and text prompts.