Nvidia kicks off its annual GTC developers conference in San Jose, California, on Monday with CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote scheduled for 11 a.m. PT/2 p.m. ET.
GTC – which stands for GPU Technology Conference – is Nvidia’s flagship annual event, which runs from March 16 to March 19. The chipmaker typically uses the spotlight to announce new products, foster partnerships, and lay out its vision for the future of computing. Huang’s keynote will focus on Nvidia’s role in the future of computing and artificial intelligence. You can watch the two-hour address in person at SAP Center or Live talk broadcast On the event website. the YouTube live broadcast Embedded below.
The broader three-day event focuses on what comes next in AI across industries, including healthcare, robotics and self-driving vehicles.
On the software side, Nvidia is rumored to be launching an open source platform for enterprise AI customers, dubbed Nemoclawas originally reported by Wired. The platform will give companies a structured way to build and deploy AI agents (programs that can perform multi-step tasks autonomously) and will position Nvidia to mirror similar offerings from companies like OpenAI.
On the hardware side, the company is also rumored to be launching a version A new chip designed to speed up the AI reasoning process – The process by which an AI model applies what it has learned to generate responses or make decisions, as opposed to the initial training process, which requires much more computing power. Faster and cheaper inference is widely viewed as one of the last bottlenecks to broadly scaling AI applications. The chip will represent Nvidia’s latest attempt to dominate not only the training market, where it already controls an estimated 80% share, but also the inference market, where competition is rapidly intensifying from custom chips made by Google, Amazon and others.
There will also be a range of partnership announcements and demos showcasing Nvidia’s AI capabilities across industries.
Kevin Cook, chief equity strategist at Zacks Investment Research, told TechCrunch that attendees should also expect to learn what the company plans to do with its relationship with Groq, as inference company Nvidia reportedly paid $20 billion late last year to license its technology. There is a lot of curiosity about this relationship, given that Jonathan Ross, founder of Groq; Sunny Madara, GROC’s boss; Other members of the Groq team have agreed to join Nvidia to help develop and scale this licensed technology.
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