Nvidia, Jensen Huang and AI
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NVIDIA’s market value broke a record on Wednesday after dipping in spring amid political uncertainty and chip restrictions.
Silicon Valley chipmaker Nvidia on Wednesday became the first publicly traded company to surpass a $4 trillion market valuation, putting the latest exclamation point on the investor frenzy surrounding an artificial intelligence boom powered by its industry-leading processors.
It's clear that all three of these stocks make interesting AI buys, but to decide where to put our money right now, it's a good idea to take a look at valuation. Here, Nvidia trades at a very reasonable level but still is the priciest of the bunch.
Nvidia-backed Perplexity AI said on Wednesday it has launched Comet, a new web browser with AI-powered search capabilities, as the startup looks to challenge the dominance of market leader Alphabet's Google Chrome.
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Dieter Fox, the former head of NVIDIA's robotics research lab in Seattle, is launching a robotics initiative at the nonprofit Allen Institute for AI (Ai2).
On Wednesday, Nvidia became the first company in history to reach $4 trillion market valuation as shares rose more than 2 percent, reports CNBC. The GPU maker's stock has climbed 22 percent since the start of 2025, continuing a trend driven by demand for AI hardware following ChatGPT's late 2022 launch.
Nvidia's historic $4 trillion milestone reveals three business revolutions: AI employees, smart robots, intelligence infrastructure. Why every company should care.
NVIDIA held its "GeForce RTX Future of AI" event in Delhi, introducing new RTX 50 series GPUs and talking about its new advancements in AI.
Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison and Nvidia plan to roll out AI-RAN technologies, which combine AI and wireless networks.
Micron is well-positioned to benefit from this trend, with its advanced HBM3E and newly shipped HBM4 products offering superior performance and efficiency. Major AI players like Nvidia and Google are adopting HBM, despite higher costs, signaling strong, price-inelastic demand for Micron's high-performance memory.