Insiders at American artificial intelligence (AI) startup CoreWeave (NASDAQ: CRWV) have been on a selling spree over the past three months, just as the company became a key player of semiconductor giant Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).
Nvidia (NVDA) and longtime partner Foxconn said they will build an AI factory supercomputer in Taiwan.
The chip giant has created DGX Cloud Lepton, a new service that will make its AI chips directly available to developers across a variety of cloud platforms.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced plans on Monday for Taiwan's first ‘AI supercomputer' during his keynote speech at COMPUTEX 2025 at Taipei Music Center.
One of the most notable announcements was its new "NVLink Fusion" program, which will allow customers and partners to use non-Nvidia CPUs and GPUs in tandem with Nvidia's products and NVLink. "NV link fusion is so that you can build semi-custom AI infrastructure, not just semi-custom chips," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at the Computex 2025 in Taiwan.
CEO Jensen Huang said Monday that the company will be opening its AI server platform to rival chip makers including Qualcomm and Marvell Technology.
Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA, ETR:NVD) has launched a new marketplace, DGX Cloud Lepton, designed to give AI developers easier access to high-performance computing power, as demand for GPUs continues to outstrip supply. The platform acts as a global exchange where developers can source GPU capacity from a growing list of cloud providers, including CoreWeave, Foxconn, SoftBank and others.
Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA, ETR:NVD) is reportedly in advanced discussions to invest in PsiQuantum, a California-based quantum computing startup, according to The Information. The talks come as PsiQuantum seeks to raise at least $750 million at a $6 billion pre-money valuation, with backers including BlackRock.
Wherever AI darling Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang goes in Taiwan, his adoring fans and excited reporters follow, hanging on his every word, arms outstretched as they beseech him to sign books, posters and even baseballs.
Ray Wang, principal analyst, founder and chairman at Constellation Research, discusses Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's keynote address at Computex and the company's decision to establish international headquarters in Taiwan.
Chipmaker Nvidia is reportedly working to lessen its dependency on Big Tech. The company is doing this by forging new partnerships to sell artificial intelligence (AI) to national governments, corporations and challengers to companies like Google, Amazon and Microsoft, the Financial Times (FT) reported Sunday (May 18).
Michael Cuggino discusses his firm's moves since the “Liberation Day” market sell-off. He emphasizes the importance of diversification across sectors and asset classes, and is also looking for companies with pricing power and strong dividends.