China, Nvidia
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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 CEO Jensen Huang says fear of failure is still what drives him—so he runs the business like it's going to go bankrupt in 33 days
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been the biggest growth driver of the stock market in 2025. Despite the economic uncertainties, tariff concerns, and a government shutdown, AI stocks have remained at the top and led the stock market higher.
Azure's AI processing power is largely provided by Nvidia GPUs. As part of Anthropic's deal with Microsoft, Nvidia will be supplying clusters of its current Grace Blackwell superchips, as well as chips built on its upcoming Vera Rubin architecture.
Nvidia has previously shown off technologies in which AI powers NPCs in video games, implying that the tensor cores in Nvidia’s GPUs will be used for more than just rendering ray-traced photons and pixels, but will be used as a fundamental part of creative interaction.
Instead of a single, massive LLM, Nvidia's new 'orchestration' paradigm uses a small model to intelligently delegate tasks to a team of tools and specialized models.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said he met with President Trump on Wednesday and discussed export controls amid a faltering push in Congress to place new restrictions on advanced chip sales to China.
Nvidia isn’t just contributing chips to the effort to transform healthcare, says VP of healthcare Kimberly Powell. It’s building an entire infrastructure system.
While the market views this as a once-in-a-lifetime revolution in artificial intelligence, Burry perceives it as a bubble, inflated not solely by
Morgan Stanley analysts said Nvidia will maintain its position as the AI hardware king, raising their 12-month price target for the stock.
Nvidia is reportedly staring down new competition from one of its own customers, but it's not the end of the road for the AI chip leader.