NVIDIA provides the latest GPU technology upgrades at the GTC conference.

 NVIDIA provides the latest GPU technology upgrades at the GTC conference.

The CEO of NVIDIA, Jensen Huang, made a keynote address at the company's GTC conference, where he announced some intriguing new technology.

The GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs, built on the firm's revolutionary Ada Lovelace architecture, was unveiled by him. Ada has been updated with the newest NVIDIA DLSS technology, a new Streaming Multiprocessor, an RT core with twice the ray-triangle intersection throughput, a new Tensor Core, and 1.4 petaflops of Tensor processor power.

Huang referred to this launch as a "quantum leap" in the direction of developing fully simulated environments.

In addition, he declared that manufacturing of the next-generation Hopper GPU had reached total capacity and would be available for shipment within a matter of weeks. Grace Hopper fuses the Grace data center CPU (built on Arm) with Hopper graphics processing units. It's perfect for recommendation engines and will considerably boost rapid memory capacity. At the start of 2023, you can purchase systems equipped with Grace Hopper.

After that, Huang announced DRIVE Thor, a processor designed for use in areas as diverse as robots, medical devices, industrial automation, and edge AI systems. It's like a Hopper with an Ada, and a Grace rolled into one!

The Nemo LLM Service has also been updated; it is a cloud service for customizing pretrained LLMs (large language models). Huang claims that LLMs are the most useful AI models at the moment because of their ability to grasp linguistic concepts independently.

Huang added that new cloud services are being introduced alongside new chips and platform enhancements. These infrastructures drive the future generation of AI in academia, business, and other fields.

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