NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang says he can't trust Samsung's HBM memory, 'we cannot trust and do business with them because senior executives change frequently'.
Jensen Huang and Nvidia both saw their values hit hard Monday as investors digested the impact of Chinese AI company DeepSeek.
Huang's net worth fell from $121 billion to around $100 billion, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
US chip giant Nvidia and its CEO Jensen Huang are set for a record wipeout on Monday after Chinese startup DeepSeek upended the tech sector with its advanced new artificial intelligence model.
Samsung Electronics (SSNLF) received approval to supply its high-bandwidth memory, or HBM, chips to Nvidia (NVDA).
Samsung Electronics Co.’s pivotal chip division reported a smaller-than-expected profit as the world’s largest memory maker fights to narrow the lead arch-rival SK Hynix Inc. has in the artificial intelligence arena.
Samsung Electronics Co. has obtained approval to supply its high-bandwidth memory chips to Nvidia Corp., according to people familiar with the matter.Most Read from BloombergManhattan’s Morning Commut
Rating for Harmony Biosciences stock jumped into a new percentile Thursday, with an increase from 70 to 83. This proprietary rating tracks market leadership by showing how a stock's price movement over the last 52 weeks compares to that of other stocks on the major indexes.
Detailed price information for Micron Technology (MU-Q) from The Globe and Mail including charting and trades.
Some analysts were quick to assert that DeepSeek’s leap in AI efficiency—using far less computing horsepower and thus far less electricity—blows a hole in the widely accepted narrative that AI is power-hungry. Some in the climate community are already signaling relief that AI’s magic could be available with a lighter energy footprint.
If your device is at capacity, here's a sneaky way to free up 7GB of storage per device — at the cost of Apple Intelligence.
Jensen Huang's damaging comments about quantum computing caused major turbulence for the Berkeley-based Rigetti Computing's stock. But that's not the end of the story.