Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's recent low-profile visit to China has reaffirmed the company's strategic focus on this crucial market amid tightening US restrictions on advanced semiconductor exports.
Huawei wants to dethrone Nvidia in China as it plans for new AI chips to challenge the latter’s dominance in that space.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently visited China to celebrate Chinese New Year with employees and reaffirm the company’s commitment
Nvidia has said Blackwell demand will likely drive revenues beyond the group's estimate of "several billion dollars" this quarter.
Huawei eyes larger share of domestic AI chip market by retrofitting AI models trained on Nvidia GPUs and helping companies make the two systems compatible.
China is making significant strides in artificial intelligence and robotics, with the introduction of ‘Xiaotie’, the country’s first humanoid passenger service AI robot in the railway system. This innovative robot,
Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman and many more—one was missing: Jensen Huang, founder and chief executive of chip company Nvidia. He is spending time t
Meanwhile, a slew of other tech executives including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are reportedly set to attend the events on Monday.
Nvidia has purportedly disabled overclocking and multi-GPU support on the RTX 5090D to ensure its performance does not exceed U.S. export regulations.
The past two years have been big for Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), thanks to its dominance in the artificial intelligence (AI) chip market. The stock roared higher, gaining more than 800% over the period -- and this movement drove Nvidia to a market value of more than $3.
Nvidia stock fell Monday after the Biden administration released new rules aimed at controlling the flow of artificial intelligence to China.
Semiconductor stocks are getting hit with a wave of bearish pressures following news that the U.S. will take new steps to limit the export of advanced chips used for AI.