NVIDIA, Vera Rubin
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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.
This year, we are seeing is perhaps the biggest generational change in Nvidia we’ve ever witnessed, with a new CPU, a new GPU, new networking chips, an AI model for automated driving and new open models for agentic AI.
Nvidia is gearing up to release its newest Vera Rubin superchip, designed to drastically boost AI efficiency. The chip, currently in production, is slated for launch in the latter half of 2026, the company announced at the CES tech conference in Las Vegas on January 5.
At the annual CES (Consumer Technology Association) event in Las Vegas, Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang unveiled a supercomputer based on its next-generation AI processor, Rubin. The processor combines with five other chips with an Israeli connection - its new core processor Vera,
The chips could make some cooling systems “not necessary” for data centers, Nvidia's CEO said. That could hurt demand for a major component of the facilities.
Why Nvidia’s decision to call its next-generation platform 'Rubin' says more about its ambitions than any benchmark slide.
The Times of Israel on MSN
Nvidia unveils next-generation AI superchip architecture partly developed in Israel
US tech giant says four out of the six new chips that make up the new Rubin computing platform were developed by engineers at its R&D centers in the Jewish state The post Nvidia unveils next-generation AI superchip architecture partly developed in Israel appeared first on The Times of Israel.
But on Tuesday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang poured cold water on the idea that the AI boom was also creating an HVAC boom. Huang said his company’s next generation chips won’t need as much cooling.
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Elon Musk said Nvidia’s new autonomous models will not pressure Tesla’s Full Self-Driving system for at least five to six years
Elon Musk on Tuesday said he doesn’t see Nvidia’s new self-driving tools as a problem for Tesla right after the latter’s CEO Jensen Huang introduced Alpamayo at CES in Vegas. The Alpamayo system is supposed to help cars think like people,