Nvidia’s market cap is now greater than that of its leading competitors combined—and doubled—as it corners the market on chips for artificial intelligence. The company’s $3.66 trillion market cap as of Monday was more than double the combined market cap of competitors ARM ($155 billion),
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the performance of his company's AI chips is advancing faster than historical rates set by Moore's Law, the rubric that drove
One reason why Nvidia has maintained such a dominant lead for so long is that it continually pushes the envelope with new features. Popular games and game engines implement those features, which may only work on Nvidia's hardware,
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.
On Monday at CES, the company unveiled Project Digits, a $3,000 personal AI supercomputer powered by a new GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip. Reuters reports that yesterday Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang hinted to investors and analysts that there are bigger plans for the Arm-based CPU within that chip, co-developed with MediaTek.
We have plans,' Jensen Huang tells financial analysts shortly after Nvidia unveiled Project DIGITS, a mini desktop system focused on AI training.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says MediaTek could sell desktop processor chip co-developed with Nvidia, showcased at CES 2025. AMD and Intel are key competitors.
The chipmaker and AI darling unveiled its GeForce RTX 50 Series desktop and laptop GPUs, — kicking off a string of entertainment-related AI announcements and discussions at the trade show.
Intel's Arc B570 GPU is ready for launch, featuring Xe2 cores, 10GB VRAM, and AI-powered Frame Generation. Discover its specs, pricing, and performance.
Daniel Sparks and/or his clients have no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Intel and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: short February 2025 $27 calls on Intel. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
As a result, the stock finished the month down 17%, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. As you can see from the chart, the stock plunged shortly after the CEO announcement, and stayed down from there, falling again after the Federal Reserve trimmed its rate-cut forecast for 2025.