Nvidia invests $2B in Synopsys
Digest more
Nvidia, AI and Amazon
Digest more
Both companies could help bring quantum computing power to AI systems, but they are taking different approaches to the technology.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met separately with President Donald Trump and Republican senators Wednesday as tech executives work to secure favorable federal policies for the artificial intelligence industry, including the limited sale of Nvidia’s highly valued computer chips to U.S. rivals like China.
Nvidia on Wednesday published new data showing that its latest artificial intelligence server can improve the performance of new models - including two popular ones from China - by 10 times.
But perhaps the biggest threat to Nvidia going forward is a name no one expected. That's Alphabet ( GOOG +0.29%) ( GOOGL +0.26%), which is reportedly in talks with Facebook parent Meta Platforms to sell it billions of dollars' worth of AI processing chips.
In a wide-ranging interview, Huang claims AI growth is gradual, powerful and already changing global power dynamics.
Jensen Huang believes the future of AI will be shaped by steady waves of innovation rather than one dramatic breakthrough.
Nvidia’s leading position in AI chips is secure, but its profit margins look vulnerable.
The healthy spending on artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure is set to continue in 2026, as evident from the recent quarterly results released by major hyperscalers and the announcements made by key AI companies such as OpenAI.
Nvidia stock slipped on Wednesday as investors reacted to fresh competitive pressure from Amazon’s new Trainium 3 artificial intelligence chip, the latest sign that major cloud providers are accelerating efforts to develop their own AI silicon.