Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA, ETR:NVD) announced it is teaming up with Perplexity, a fast-growing AI-powered search and reasoning engine, to roll out across Europe locally optimized large language models (LLMs) tailored to the continent's diverse languages and industries. Unveiled at Nvidia's GTC event in Paris, the collaboration involves a wide coalition of European and Middle Eastern research institutions, AI developers, and regional cloud providers.
Based on Huang's latest comments from a recent keynote address, AI is already “central to everything.
“The Next NVIDIA” Could Change Your Life NVIDIA has returned 250-fold in the past 10 years as artificial intelligence took off.
NVIDIA braces for an $8B hit in Q2 sales as U.S. export curbs block China-bound H20 AI chips, exposing key growth risks.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced several AI infrastructure partnerships throughout Europe at GTC Paris on Wednesday
U.S.-China trade relations present headwinds, but Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) is also the dominant AI chipmaker in the market, and the company's profitability remains strong.
DeepL on Wednesday said it was deploying one of the latest Nvidia systems that would allow the German startup to translate the whole internet in 18 days, down from 194 days previously. The announcement underscores how Nvidia is trying to broaden the customer base for its chips beyond hyperscalers, such as Microsoft and Amazon.
The semiconductor sector is regaining momentum, with stocks like Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) rallying as part of a broader push to reclaim their strong performance from early 2024.
"Quantum computing is reaching an inflection point," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said during his keynote speech at the chipmaker's GTC Paris developer conference. "We are within reach" of being able to apply quantum computers "in areas that can solve some interesting problems in the coming years," Huang added.
Quantum computing technology is at an inflection point, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang reiterated on Wednesday at the VivaTech conference in Paris.
Investors were in a wait-and-see mode early Tuesday as eyes turned to the Nvidia's artificial-intelligence developer conference in France.
Nvidia (NVDA 0.86%) has accomplished a lot over the past three years. The company launched its Hopper chip architecture back in 2022, delivered a 300% gain in annual revenue since that product release, joined the elite Dow Jones Industrial Average -- and even scored the best performance in the index last year -- and released its new Blackwell chip architecture in recent months.