Chipmaker Nvidia notched $30 billion in revenue last fiscal quarter, driven in large part by the AI industry’s insatiable demand for GPUs. GPUs are essential for training and running AI models; they contain thousands of cores that work in parallel to quickly perform the linear algebra equations sca...
Read Also
- The political, social and psychological toll of family deaths in war
- Maximize Storage and Minimize Costs with Samsung’s 50% Off T7 Shield Portable SSD for Prime Day
- Unify, an OpenAI Converge accelerator grad, lands $12M for ‘warm outbound’ messages
- Honda Zero first drive: an EV without the baggage
- Former Google Maps engineers get Sequioa backing to build out an AI-powered collboration board
- Spotted handfish genome sequenced for the first time
- This Controller Can Swap Its Face Buttons Between Xbox and Nintendo Switch Layouts
- Make your work more efficient with this AI subscription Prime Day deal
- The Latest ‘Face’ on Mars Is the Most Dramatic Yet
- Wi-Fi keep dropping? This popular TP-Link Wi-Fi extender is just $13 for October Prime Day
Latest TechCrunch
- Unify, an OpenAI Converge accelerator grad, lands $12M for ‘warm outbound’ messages
- Former Google Maps engineers get Sequioa backing to build out an AI-powered collboration board
- A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs
- Announcing True Anomaly, Slingshot Aerospace, and Space Workforce 2030 at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024
- Kasperksy says it’s closing down its UK office and laying off dozens
- Fisker bankruptcy hits major speed bump as fleet sale is now in question
- Alaska Airlines’ venture lab spins out its first startup: Odysee
- The New York Times is testing a new game called Zorse
- Snapchat is bringing ads to the Chat tab
- Honda gave us a sneak peek of its 0 Series EVs — here’s what we learned