Nvidia still reveals the graphic chip most advanced by AI

In an Arena de Las Vegas crowded, the founder of Nvidia, Jensen Huang, was held on stage and was amazed by the crispy computer graphics displayed on the screen behind him. He looked at a woman with black hair crossing golden double doors ornate and took the rays of light that spilled through stained glass.
“The quantity of geometry you saw was absolutely crazy,” Huang told an audience of thousands of people in Ces 2025 the night of January 6. “It would have been impossible without artificial intelligence.”
The flea manufacturer and AI Darling have unveiled its office and laptop GPUs of the GeForce RTX 50 series – its most advanced consumer processor units for players, creators and developers. Technology is designed to be used on desktop and laptop computers. Reuters reported that Nvidia has also removed new products such as artificial intelligence to better train robots and cars, and its first desktop computer.
Before Mr. Huang's speech, the Nvidia action climbed 3.4% to reach its record in November. NVIDIA and other AI actions continue to climb while criticism increases that their stock prices have already shot too high, too quickly. Despite the concerns of a potential bubble, industry continues to talk about its potential.
Huang said GPUs, who use the company's new generation artificial intelligence chip, Blackwell, can provide breakthroughs in AI rendering. Reuters reported that fleas vary at a price from $ 549 to $ 1,999, with top models when arriving on January 30 and lower -coming level models in February.
“Blackwell, the AI engine, has arrived for PC players, developers and creatives,” said Huang, adding that Blackwell “has been innovation on the most important infographic since we introduced programmable shade 25 years ago”. Blackwell Technology is now in full production, he said.
Drawing on NVIDIA technology published 25 years ago, the company has announced that it would also introduce the “RTX neuronal shaders”, which use AI to help make the game characters in retail – a notoriously delicate task because people can easily identify a small error on digital humans.
Huang said Nvidia also presents a new series of technologies that allow “autonomous characters” to perceive, plan and act as human players. These characters can help players plan strategies or adapt the tactics to challenge players and create more dynamic battles.
During his speech, Reuters reported that Mr. Huang also unveiled what Nvidia calls Cosmos foundation models, which generate a photo-realistic video used to form robots and autonomous cars at a much lower cost than the use of conventional data.
By creating so -called “synthetic” training data, the models help robots and cars to understand the physical world similar to the way big languages have helped chatbots to generate natural language responses, according to Reuters.
Users will be able to give Cosmos a text description that can be used to generate a video of a world that obeys the laws of physics, Reuters reported. This promises to be much cheaper than collecting data, as is done today, such as putting cars on the road to collect videos or make humans teach robots repetitive tasks.
Bank of America's analyst, Vivek Arya, said that he was staying to see if the robotics push would considerably strengthen NVIDIA sales, reported Reuters.
“The challenge in our opinion is … Make the products quite reliable, cheap enough and quite omnipresent to generate credible commercial models,” Arya said in a note to customers. “From this point of view, robotics could remain another cool but niche like metovenous or autonomous cars.”
In addition to NVIDIA, technology giants such as AMD, Google and Samsung are in these 2025 to unveil artificial intelligence tools to help content creators and consumers in their quest for entertainment.
Reuters said that Nvidia's actions closed at a record summit of $ 149.43 on January 5, assessing 3.66 billions of dollars and making the second most precious listed company in the world behind Apple.
This story was reported by the Associated Press. Reuters' equipment has been used in this report.