NVIDIA strikes deal with chip startup Groq, hires CEO
Digest more
NVIDIA tested Intel's 18A process
Digest more
Groq CEO Jonathan Ross’ net worth surges after Nvidia’s $20 billion deal: Here’s how much he’s worth
Groq CEO Jonathan Ross’ net worth has reportedly jumped sharply following Nvidia’s $20 billion deal, spotlighting how the landmark partnership has boosted the AI chip startup founder’s wealth.
Wall Street’s favorite AI stock just found a new way to tighten its grip on the data center; rival chipmakers may not like where this is headed.
Nvidia has agreed to license technology from AI startup Groq for use in some of its artificial intelligence chips, marking the chipmaker's largest deal and underscoring its push to strengthen competitiveness amid surging demand.
Micron has raised its server-growth forecast for 2025 to a high teens percentage range, up from the prior expectation of 10%. It expects the server market to keep growing in 2026, a trend that's likely to last through 2030.
It’s no surprise that NVIDIA is gradually dropping support for older videocards, with the Pascal (GTX 10xx) GPUs most recently getting axed. What’s more surprising is the terrible way
Nvidia is hurtling towards the end of 2025, after a very successful year, during which it redefined what it means to be a chip giant during the AI boom. Much of the reason for its success this year is its much-vaunted hardware.
Nvidia boomed again in the 2010s when people realized that its GPUs were also extremely good at cryptocurrency mining. Cryptocurrency miners relied on the same PC-focused GPUs as gaming, and both growth drivers were included in the company's gaming segment, which was historically the bulk of revenue. However, things have changed.