Following his blockbuster keynote address at the 2025 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang shared more about his vision of a future where AI, powered by his company’s hardware and software, is as commonplace as the internet.
Nvidia continues its expansion into robotics software with Mega, an Omniverse Blueprint designed specifically for robotic fleet management at scale. The
Nvidia stock (NVDA) reached new heights in 2024, buoyed by demand for its artificial intelligence (AI)-enabling graphics processing units
Jensen Huang’s address at CES followed a trading session that sent Nvidia’s value to $3.66 trillion.
Jensen Huang founded accelerated computing company Nvidia ( NVDA -0.02%) in 1993, and has served as the CEO and president ever since. Nvidia has achieved many breakthroughs under his leadership, but the invention of the graphics processing unit (GPU) in 1999 was particularly momentous.
In this exclusive interview, we get the scoop on NVIDIA’s dive into robotics and AI technology. Watch for more details on their physical AI platform, Cosmos, working in sync with their simulation technology platform, Omniverse, to facilitate humanoid robot interaction in a factory space.
Continued Ives, “We could go back to quarters where the stock sells off, bears come out of hibernation mode, stock goes to $100, then all of a sudden, two months later, back up to all-time highs. These knee-jerk reactions, it’s easy to get scared by them because they don’t say anything about near-term demand.”
Shares of Serve Robotics ( SERV -13.00%) skyrocketed 55.2% in December, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence. As 2024 drew to a close, investors seemed to be increasingly hungry for investments on the more speculative side of the spectrum, and Serve certainly fits that description.
Nvidia’s talk of huge market opportunities in autonomous driving and robotics is “potentially comforting for investors thinking about what might come next for the company,” an analyst says.
Nearly 140,000 people descended on the Las Vegas this week for the Consumer Electronics Show, one of the largest trade shows in the industry. Alongside them were Pittsburgh companies eager to make a splash.
NVIDIA's stock is fluctuating around $140 per share this week, with analysts closely monitoring the 50-day moving average for potential trends. Beyond stock charts, NVIDIA is gaining attention at CES 2025,