Sometimes the best thing you can learn from successful business people is what not to do. When I worked at a book manufacturing plant, the human resources supervisor took a stroll around the shop floor once a week,
Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, praised Huawei's Mate XT as revolutionary after testing it, highlighting its durability and innovative design.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang believes data center operators will spend $1 trillion over the next four years on upgrading their infrastructure to meet demand from AI developers. Since the data center segment currently accounts for 88% of Nvidia's total revenue, that spending will be instrumental to the company's future success.
Meanwhile, a slew of other tech executives including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are reportedly set to attend the events on Monday.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's recent low-profile visit to China has reaffirmed the company's strategic focus on this crucial market amid tightening US restrictions on advanced semiconductor exports.
Jensen Huang’s comments at last week’s CES about quantum computing being decades away stirred up discussion within the quantum industry.
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 has hinted that it plans to enter the Windows PC market, and we have compiled all the details about Nvidia's upcoming ARM chipset.
When Taiwanese media reported on Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang dining with TSMC, supply chain partners, and AI server company executives, curiosity arose about the VIPs accompanying Huang during his visits
Nvidia was founded at a Denny's restaurant in 1993 and went public six years later on Jan. 22, 1999. A look back at how much investors could have made from the IPO.
China established a colossal US$8.2 billion AI investment fund, intensifying the already heated technology war with the United States
Electronics titans have tried for years to crack the home robot market, but one company thinks it finally has built the perfect one.