AI, China and NVIDIA
Digest more
NVIDIA's beefed-up GB300 'Blackwell Ultra' AI servers are now in production, will begin shipping in September, with 'no major issues' at this stage.
Nvidia ( NVDA 1.06%) has proven itself to be the bellwether of the artificial intelligence (AI) industry. The company is the leading AI chip designer and has been among the first to speak of what's next in the field -- from sovereign AI to humanoid robots.
Amid rising infrastructure demands, AI startups like Crusoe Energy Systems are tapping large-scale credit lines, PitchBook reported. Crusoe last month raised a $750 million credit facility from Brookfield Asset Management (NYSE:BAM) to expand its data centers and acquire more graphics processing units from Nvidia Corp.
At the Beijing Expo, Jensen Huang also announced plans for a new chip for Chinese clients that is designed for robotics and smart factories.
The current AI frenzy could potentially trigger a market crash more severe than the dot-com bubble burst of 1999.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang contradicts Anthropic CEO's 'white-collar apocalypse' prediction, suggesting AI will augment jobs while encouraging workers to adapt.
Researchers recently demoed GPUHammer, the first Rowhammer-style exploit targeting GPU memory, posing major threats to AI reliability and data integrity.
The U.S. House Select Committee on China has expressed concerns about the Trump administration's decision to allow Nvidia ( NASDAQ: NVDA) to resume shipments of its H20 AI chips to China.