AI, Huang and Nvidia
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Nvidia CEO urges improved US-China trade relations amid AI chip ban: 'Significant source of revenue'
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is urging the U.S. and China to improve trade relations, arguing that access to the Chinese market is essential for American competitiveness in artificial intelligence (AI).
Prosecutors have accused Brian Raymond, founder of AI infrastructure and consulting company Bitworks, and three others of selling coveted Nvidia chips to unspecified Chinese companies.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang dismissed AI bubble fears, arguing that today's massive spending is justified by a global shift from CPUs to GPU-accelerated computing—even as investors like Peter Thiel and Michael Burry warn of overheating and tech giants ramp up capex to unprecedented levels.
Fears about the artificial intelligence boom turning into an overblown bubble have diminished for now, thanks to a stellar earnings report from Nvidia.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered a technical explanation for why he does not believe artificial intelligence is a "bubble" and demand for advanced hardware is real, durable, and justified -- not speculative.
Strong revenue and “off-the-charts” GPU demand show Nvidia’s AI engine still roaring as CEO Jensen Huang delivers a beat-and-raise quarter
C hip giant Nvidia beat Wall Street's expectations for revenue and upcoming sales, easing fears about AI spending that have jolted the stock market in recent days. In its quarterly earnings report on Wednesday,
President Donald Trump is expected to make remarks Wednesday at investment summit with Saudi Arabia, after a conversation about the future of AI, energy, and space travel with Elon Musk and Jensen Huang.