Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled the next generation of RTX Blackwell GPUs at CES 2025, alongside "Cosmos," a foundation model aimed at accelerating autonomous vehicle and robotics development. He also declared the rise of "Agentic AI" as the next major technological shift,
CES should be called the AI Show as Nvidia and an uncountable number of emerging vendors are infusing AI into their future offerings.
The Nvidia boss unveiled a new AI platform at CES called Cosmos, which aims to give robots and autonomous cars endless real-world scenarios to study.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang are off to a flying start in 2025 as excitement about AI sent their companies' stocks even higher.
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
CES 2025 not only reaffirmed the importance of artificial intelligence as a driver of change, but also consolidated Nvidia as a benchmark in this technological revolution. With advances in personal computing, video games, automotive and robotics, the company is shaping the future of multiple industries and demonstrating that AI has no limits.
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, codeveloped with MediaTek.
AI models that take inspiration from the mental models of the world that humans develop naturally. At CES 2025 in Las Vegas, the company announced that it is making openly available a family of world models that can predict and generate "physics-aware" videos. Nvidia is calling this family Cosmos World Foundation Models, or Cosmos WFMs for short.
"The ChatGPT moment for general robotics is just around the corner," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in his keynote speech at CES.
LAS VEGAS — In a packed Las Vegas arena, Nvidia founder Jensen Huang stood on stage and marveled over the crisp real-time computer graphics displayed on the screen behind him. He watched as a dark-haired woman walked through ornate gilded double doors and took in the rays of light that poured in through stained glass windows.