NVIDIA to invest $1bn in Nokia
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Apple joins Microsoft and NVIDIA
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NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang announced that the company is manufacturing its Blackwell AI GPUs in America during today's GTC Keynote presentation. The man in the leather jacket even put together a nifty video highlighting the revamped supply chain.
Nvidia said it plans to take a $1 billion stake in Nokia, sending shares of the Finnish tech company up 25% Tuesday afternoon. Nvidia shares also climbed.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Tuesday that the artificial intelligence chip leader will build seven new supercomputers for the U. Department of Energy, and said the company has $500 billion in bookings for its AI chips.
Nvidia is almost the first company to reach a $5 trillion valuation, with $500 billion in bookings for AI processors. The company announced building supercomputers for the U.S. Department of Energy. Its stock closed almost 5% higher,
Nvidia is working with several communications companies, including Booz Allen, Cisco, MITRE, ODC and T-Mobile to create what they're calling America's first AI-native wireless stack for 6G, integrating advanced AI across hardware, software and architecture to prepare future networks for the growth of AI traffic.
Drug company Eli Lilly and NVIDIA announced a new partnership to build a supercomputer for drug research. Drug manufacturer Eli Lilly and NVIDIA have announced a partnership to build out an AI supercomputer for pharmaceutical research and development.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is delivering his first keynote at the Washington, D.C., iteration of the GTC developer conference. He’ll be focused on U.S. AI infrastructure, quantum computing and robotics.
The company envisions the addition of generative AI in robotics, machines, autonomous vehicles and physical devices.
Nvidia is partnering with Spectro Cloud, a startup backed by Goldman Sachs, to simplify AI adoption and management.
The AI hardware giant invested in Redwood Materials, best known for recycling EV batteries, but it's now also tackling data centers' massive energy needs.
At Nvidia’s first Washington GTC, the company that made GPUs a religion is courting a new congregation: agencies with budgets bigger than data centers