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  • Only four companies in the world are worth more than $2 trillion, Microsoft, Apple, Alphabet, parent company of Google, and computer chip maker NVIDIA.

  • The California-based company saw its stock market value soar from $1 trillion to $2 trillion in just eight months this past year, fueled by the insatiable demand for its cutting-edge technology, the hardware, and software that make today's artificial intelligence possible.

  • We wondered how a company founded in 1993 to improve video game graphics turned into a titan of 21st-century AI.

  • So we went to Silicon Valley to meet NVIDIA's 61-year-old co-founder and CEO, Jensen Huang, who has no doubt AI is about to change everything.

  • The story will continue in a moment.

  • At NVIDIA's annual developers conference this past March, the mood wasn't just upbeat.

  • It was downright giddy.

  • More than 11,000 enthusiasts, software developers, tech moguls, and happy shareholders filed into San Jose's Pro Hockey Arena to kick off a four-day AI extravaganza.

  • They came to see this man, Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA.

  • Welcome to GTC.

  • What was that like for you to walk out on that stage and see that?

  • You know, Bill, I'm an engineer, not a performer.

  • When I walked out there and all of the people going crazy, it took the breath out of me.

  • And so I was the scariest I've ever been.

  • I'm still scared.

  • You'd never know it.

  • Clad in his signature cool black outfit, Jensen shared the stage with NVIDIA-powered robots.

  • Let me finish up real quick.

  • And shared his vision of an AI future.

  • A new industrial revolution.

  • It reminded us of the transformational moment when Apple's Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone.

  • Jensen Huang unveiled NVIDIA's latest graphics processing unit, or GPU.

  • This is Blackwell.

  • Designed in America but made in Taiwan like most advanced semiconductors, Blackwell, he says, is the fastest chip ever.

  • Google is gearing up for Blackwell.

  • The whole industry is gearing up for Blackwell.

  • NVIDIA ushered in the AI revolution with its game-changing GPU, a single chip able to process a myriad of calculations all at once, not sequentially like more standard chips.

  • The GPU is the engine of NVIDIA's AI computer, enabling it to rapidly absorb a firehose of information.

  • It does quadrillions of calculations a second.

  • It's just insane numbers.

  • Is it doing things now that surprise you?

  • We're hoping that it does things that surprise us.

  • That's the whole point.

  • In some areas like drug discovery, designing better materials that are lighter, stronger.

  • We need artificial intelligence to help us explore the universe in places that we could have never done ourselves.

  • Let me show you.

  • Here, Bill, look at this.

  • Jensen took us around the GTC convention hall to show us what AI has made possible in just the past few years.

  • I'm making your drink now.

  • Some creations were dazzling.

  • This is a digital twin of the Earth.

  • Once it learns how to calculate weather, it can calculate and predict weather 3,000 times faster than a supercomputer and 1,000 times less energy.

  • But NVIDIA's AI revolution extends far beyond this hall.

  • Blue metallic spaceship.

  • And let's generate something.

  • Pinar Seyhan Demirda is originally from Istanbul, but co-founded Kubrick near Boston.

  • Her AI application uses NVIDIA's GPUs to instantly turn a simple text prompt into a virtual movie set for a fraction of the cost of today's backdrops.

  • This isn't something that's already planned.

  • No, we're doing it in real time.

  • It's life.

  • Is Hollywood knocking at your door?

  • And we're getting a lot of love.

  • Nearby, at Generate Biomedicines, Dr. Alex Snyder, head of research and development, is using NVIDIA's technology to create protein-based drugs.

  • She was surprised at first to see they showed promise in the lab.

  • Initially, when I was told about the application of AI to drug development, I sort of rolled my eyes and said, yeah, you know, show me the data.

  • And then I looked at the data and it was very compelling.

  • Dr. Snyder's team asks its AI models to create new proteins to fight specific diseases like cancer and asthma.

  • A new way to defeat the coronavirus is now in clinical trials.

  • You're now working with proteins that do not exist in nature, that you're coming up with by way of AI?

  • Yes, we are actually generating what we call de novo, completely new structures that have not existed before.

  • Do you trust it?

  • As scientists, we can't trust, we have to test.

  • We're not putting Frankensteins into people.

  • We're taking what's known and we're really pushing the field, we're pushing the biology to make drugs that look like regular drugs, but function even better.

  • This is a technology that will only get better from here.

  • Brett Adcock is CEO of FIGURE, a Silicon Valley startup with funding from NVIDIA.

  • Look at his answer to labor shortages.

  • An NVIDIA GPU-driven prototype called FIGURE 1.

  • I think what's been really extraordinary is the pace of progress we've made in 21 months.

  • From zero to this in 21 months?

  • Zero to this, yeah, we were walking this robot in under a year since I incorporated the company.

  • Could you do this without NVIDIA's technology?

  • We think they're arguably the best in the world at this.

  • I don't know if this would be possible without them.

  • I'm here to assist with tasks as requested.

  • We were amazed that FIGURE 1 is not just walking, but seemed to reason.

  • Hand me something healthy.

  • On it.

  • FIGURE 1 was able to understand I wanted the orange, not the packaged snack.

  • Thank you.

  • It's not yet perfected.

  • Yeah, you're gonna get it.

  • But the early results are so promising, German automaker BMW plans to start testing the robot in its South Carolina factory this year.

  • I think there's an opportunity to ship billions of robots in the coming decades onto the planet.

  • Billions.

  • I would think that a lot of workers would look at that as, this robot is taking my job.

  • I think over time, AI and robotics will start doing more and more of what humans can, and better.

  • But what about the worker?

  • The workers work for companies.

  • And so companies, when they become more productive, earnings increase.

  • I've never seen one company that had earnings increase and not hire more people.

  • There are some jobs that are going to become obsolete.

  • Well, let me offer it this way.

  • I believe that you still want human in the loop, because we have good judgment, because there are circumstances that the machines are not just not going to understand.

  • The futuristic NVIDIA campus sits just down the road from its modest birthplace, this Denny's in San Jose.

  • Good morning.

  • Where 31 years ago, NVIDIA was just an idea.

  • My goodness.

  • When he was 15, Jensen Huang worked as a dishwasher at Denny's.

  • As a 30-year-old electrical engineer, married with two children, he and two friends, NVIDIA co-founders Chris Malachowski and Curtis Preem, envisioned a whole new way of processing video game graphics.

  • So we came here, right here to this Denny's, sat right back there, and the three of us decided to start the company.

  • Frankly, I had no idea how to do it.

  • And nor did they.

  • None of us knew how to do anything.

  • Their big idea?

  • Accelerate the processing power of computers with a new graphics chip.

  • Their initial attempt flopped and nearly bankrupted the company in 1996.

  • And the genius of the engineers and Chris and Curtis, um, we pivoted to the right way of doing things.

  • And created their groundbreaking GPU.

  • The chip took video games from this to this today.

  • Completely changed computer graphics, saved the company, launched us into the stratosphere.

  • Just eight years after Denny's, NVIDIA earned a spot in the S&P 500.

  • Jensen then set his sights on developing the software and hardware for a revolutionary GPU-driven supercomputer, which would take the company far beyond video games.

  • To Wall Street, it was a risky bet.

  • To early developers of AI, it was a revelation.

  • Was that luck or was that vision?

  • That was, uh, uh, luck founded by vision.

  • We invented this capability.

  • And then one day, the researchers that were, uh, creating deep learning discovered this architecture.

  • Because this architecture turns out to have been perfect for them.

  • Perfect for AI.

  • Perfect for AI.

  • This is the first one we've ever shipped.

  • In 2016, Jensen delivered NVIDIA's AI supercomputer, the first of its kind, to Elon Musk, then a board member of OpenAI, which used it to create the building blocks of ChatGPT.

  • How are you?

  • When AI took off...

  • Hey, guys. ...so did Jensen Huang's reputation.

  • Can we get a picture?

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • He's now a Silicon Valley celebrity.

  • He told us the boy who immigrated from Taiwan at age nine could never have conceived of this.

  • It is the most extraordinary thing, Bill, that a normal dishwasher busboy could grow up to be this.

  • There's no magic.

  • It's just 61 years of hard work every single day.

  • I don't think there's anything more than that.

  • We met a humble Jensen at Denny's.

  • Back at NVIDIA's headquarters in Santa Clara, we saw he can be intense.

  • Let me tell you what some of the people who you work with said about you.

  • Demanding.

  • Perfectionist.

  • Not easy to work for.

  • All that sound right?

  • Perfectly, yeah.

  • It should be like that.

  • If you want to do extraordinary things, it shouldn't be easy.

  • All right, guys.

  • Keep up the good work.

  • NVIDIA has never done better.

  • Investors are bullish.

  • But last year, more than 600 top AI scientists, ethicists, and others signed this statement urging caution, warning of AI's risk to humanity.

  • When I talk to you and I hear you speak, part of me goes, gee whiz.

  • And the other part of me goes, oh my god, what are we in for?

  • Yeah, yeah.

  • Which one is it?

  • It's both.

  • It's both.

  • Yeah, you're feeling all the right feelings.

  • I feel both.

  • You feel both?

  • Sure, sure.

  • Humanity will have the choice to see themselves inferior to machines or superior to machines.

  • Pinar Seyhan Demirdaugh is an AI optimist, though she named her company Kubrick, an homage to Stanley Kubrick, the director of 2001, A Space Odyssey.

  • Hello, Hal, do you read me?

  • In that film, Hal, the AI computer, goes rogue.

  • Open the pod bay doors, Hal.

  • I'm sorry, Dave.

  • I'm afraid I can't do that.

  • I think that's what worries people about AI, that we will lose control of it.

  • Just because a machine can do faster calculations, comparisons, and analytical solution creation, that doesn't make it smarter than you.

  • It simply computates faster.

  • In my world, in my belief, smarts have to do with your capacity to love, create, expand, transcend.

  • These are qualities that no machine can ever bear, that are reserved to only humans.

  • There is something going on.

  • Jensen Huang sees an AI future of progress and prosperity, not one with machines as our masters.

  • We can only hope he's right.

  • Thank you all for coming.

  • Thank you.

Only four companies in the world are worth more than $2 trillion, Microsoft, Apple, Alphabet, parent company of Google, and computer chip maker NVIDIA.

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