CES NVIDIA's memory and storage play an important role in AI training and inference and his presentation showed how they enable modern AI solutions.
Albion Financial Group's Jason Ware shares his view on AI stocks and highlights that hyperscalers are the winners given the current AI boom regardless of U.S. government's China policy.
At the Nvidia keynote at CES 2025, CEO Jensen Huang didn't waste anytime showing off the new GeForce RTX 50 Series. Huang walked onstage carrying the graphics card to a round of applause.
I'm not any more happy about a $2,000 graphics card, but there's no denying that Nvidia stomped AMD and Intel at CES 2025.
Nvidia’s talk of huge market opportunities in autonomous driving and robotics is “potentially comforting for investors thinking about what might come next for the company,” an analyst says.
On price alone, AMD has a leg up on Nvidia. AMD offers more affordable graphics card options, focusing on the budget and midrange options. AMD's flagship GPUs, the AMD Radeon RX 70 series, start as low as $269.99, with the upper range peaking at $999.
Project Digits is a small box available from Nvidia and “Top Partners” starting at $3000. Add a monitor, keyboard, and mouse, or buy from a partner, and you will likely have the fastest and most complete AI development workstation on the market.
The GPU king also unveiled agentic AI software tools, robotics training frameworks, and a dedicated AI workstation.
Nvidia's new Cosmos model is another sign that devices and machines are getting better at understanding their environments.
The Dutch government said it is holding talks with Nvidia Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. regarding support for the construction of an artificial intelligence facility in the Netherlands.