Huang, NVIDIA
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Nvidia has been grappling with export controls on its AI chips implemented by the Trump administration in April for national security reasons.
Whether you see it as an advantage or a disadvantage, today of all days, one can't help but deny there's something… unique about the US thanks to President Trump. During this very AI-centric 24 hours for Trump—with his unveiling of the administration's AI action plan and his talk at the All-In Podcast's 'Winning the AI Race' summit—Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang also took to the summit stage and had some positive words to share about the US president (via RapidResponse47 on X).
Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang should be praised for traveling to China this week in pursuit of expansion in what is a crucial market for all manner of blue-chip U.S. companies. A world that is economically interconnected is a much more peaceful one.
President Trump has admitted he threatened to break up Nvidia, despite not knowing who Jensen Huang was and having never heard of the company before.
Three of the world’s most prominent billionaires, Oracle’s Larry Ellison, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, and Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, collectively gained $10.3
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met privately with Yan Junjie, the founder of Chinese AI startup MiniMax, during his recent visit to Beijing, marking a rare and closely watched interaction between a top US tech executive and one of China's emerging players in artificial intelligence.
Jensen Huang has established himself as America's most influential tech leader, assuming a role once occupied by Apple's Tim Cook, many tech experts say.
Jensen Huang's early life was difficult. He cleaned toilets and faced bullying. He co-founded Nvidia. The company faced initial failures. Nvidia then