China, NVIDIA and Trump
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Days after a White House meeting with President Donald Trump, Jensen Huang was being hailed by an audience on a stage in Beijing.
Key Points Nvidia, recently blocked from selling chips to China, is set to reclaim its market position there.The artificial intelligence (AI) chip giant says it aims to resume deliveries there “soon.” 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia › Nvidia's (NASDAQ: NVDA) business has been going strong over the past few years thanks to its dominance in the
At the Beijing Expo, Jensen Huang also announced plans for a new chip for Chinese clients that is designed for robotics and smart factories.
Anita Ramaswamy, columnist at The Information, joins Marketplace’s Meghan McCarty Carino for “Tech Bytes: Week in Review.”
NVIDIA's H20 AI GPUs are once again allowed to be sold in China following a reversal of restrictions by the Trump administration, and NVIDIA's CEO claims it wasn't he who changed the US President's mind.
From Jensen Huang on the exodus of Chinese scholars from the US to delivery robots, here are highlights from SCMP’s recent reporting.
Gil Luria from D.A. Davidson discusses the national security concerns around the report that U.S. officials are delaying a deal for the UAE's purchase of Nvidia AI chips.
China has leveraged its dominance over rare earths for Nvidia chips; however, this expert says world isn't decoupling, it is just bartering.
Nvidia Corp.’s Jensen Huang spent months telling everyone what a grave mistake the US was making restricting shipments of artificial intelligence processors to China — with little sign that his argument was swaying anyone.