NVIDIA Releases New Physical AI Models
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Jensen Huang took to the CES stage on Monday to share the latest from NVIDIA, and while the presentation was more a refresher of technologies the company has been working on for the past few years, there were a couple of notable announcements.
Nvidia finalized a $5B Intel stake after FTC approval, buying 214.7M shares. The move bolsters Intel’s foundry push as 18A ramps.
The RTX 3060 originally launched in February 2021 and became part of a wider range of Ti, VRAM quantity variants, plus a low-hash-rate (LHR) model designed to thwart cryptocurrency mining. (Remember when that was the only problem we had with GPU availability and pricing?)
Huang also said Nvidia has begun producing a driverless car, the CLA, powered by its technology in partnership with Mercedes-Benz. The vehicle will be released in the US in the coming months before being rolled out in Europe and Asia.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Monday touted new software the company is releasing for autonomous cars in a keynote at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, where the leader of the world's most valuable company was set to reveal product plans as it faces increasing competition from rivals as well as its own customers.
With claims of up to twice the energy efficiency of Nvidia's best options, South Korea-based FuriosaAI's RNGD platform could find a market in a chip-starved industry.
Nvidia just provided a closer look at its new computing platform for AI data centers, Vera Rubin, a release that could have major ramifications for the future of AI given the industry’s massive reliance on the company’s tech.
Nvidia is launching its new architecture in 2026, known as Rubin. While Rubin's improvements over Blackwell are impressive, they require an 800-volt infrastructure, which will require data centers to update their setup, which Nvidia also sells. That will provide a huge revenue boost for Nvidia throughout 2026.