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Nvidia

Nvidia Corporation[a][b] (/ɛnˈvɪdiə/, en-VID-ee-ə) is an American multinational corporation and technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, and incorporated in Delaware.[5] It is a software and fabless company which designs and supplies graphics processing units (GPUs), application programming interfaces (APIs) for data science and high-performance computing as well as system on a chip units (SoCs) for the mobile computing and automotive market. Nvidia is also a dominant supplier of artificial intelligence (AI) hardware and software.[6][7][8]

Trade name

NVIDIA

April 5, 1993 (1993-04-05) in Sunnyvale, California, U.S.

Worldwide

  • Jensen Huang (President and CEO)
  • Bill Dally (Chief scientist)

Increase US$60.92 billion (FY 2024)

Increase US$32.97 billion (FY 2024)

Increase US$29.76 billion (FY 2024)

Increase US$65.73 billion (FY 2024)

Increase US$42.98 billion (FY 2024)

29,600 (FY 2024)

Nvidia's professional line of GPUs are used for edge-to-cloud computing and in supercomputers and workstations for applications in such fields as architecture, engineering and construction, media and entertainment, automotive, scientific research, and manufacturing design.[9] Its GeForce line of GPUs are aimed at the consumer market and are used in applications such as video editing, 3D rendering and PC gaming. In the second quarter of 2023, Nvidia had a market share of 80.2% in the discrete desktop GPU market.[10] The company expanded its presence in the gaming industry with the introduction of the Shield Portable (a handheld game console), Shield Tablet (a gaming tablet) and Shield TV (a digital media player), as well as its cloud gaming service GeForce Now.[11]


In addition to GPU design and manufacturing, Nvidia provides the CUDA software platform and API that allows the creation of massively parallel programs which utilize GPUs.[12][13] They are deployed in supercomputing sites around the world.[14][15] In the late 2000s, Nvidia had moved into the mobile computing market, where it produces Tegra mobile processors for smartphones and tablets as well as vehicle navigation and entertainment systems.[16][17][18] Its competitors include AMD, Intel,[19] Qualcomm[20] and AI accelerator companies such as Cerebras and Graphcore. It also makes AI-powered software for audio and video processing, e.g. Nvidia Maxine.[21]


Nvidia's offer to acquire Arm from SoftBank in September 2020 failed to materialize following extended regulatory scrutiny, leading to the termination of the deal in February 2022 in what would have been the largest semiconductor acquisition.[22][23] In 2023, Nvidia became the seventh public U.S. company to be valued at over $1 trillion,[24] and, as of March 2024, it is the third most-valuable publicly traded company based in the United States, after Microsoft and Apple, with a market capitalization of $2.3 trillion.[25]

founder, president and chief executive officer

Jensen Huang

founder and NVIDIA fellow

Chris Malachowsky

Colette Kress, executive vice president and chief financial officer

Jay Puri, executive vice president of worldwide field operations

Debora Shoquist, executive vice president of operations

Tim Teter, executive vice president, general counsel and secretary

consumer-oriented graphics processing products

GeForce

professional visual computing graphics processing products (replacing GTX and Quadro)

Nvidia RTX

multi-display business graphics solution

NVS

a system on a chip series for mobile devices

Tegra

dedicated general-purpose GPU for high-end image generation applications in professional and scientific fields

Tesla

a motherboard chipset created by Nvidia for Intel (Celeron, Pentium and Core 2) and AMD (Athlon and Duron) microprocessors

nForce

Nvidia GRID, a set of hardware and services by Nvidia for graphics virtualization

Nvidia Shield, a range of gaming hardware including the , Shield Tablet and, most recently, the Shield Android TV

Shield Portable

Nvidia Drive, a range of hardware and software products for designers and manufacturers of autonomous vehicles. The is a high-performance computer platform aimed at autonomous driving through deep learning,[139] while Driveworks is an operating system for driverless cars.[140]

Drive PX-series

a range of data processing units, initially inherited from their acquisition of Mellanox Technologies[141][142]

Nvidia BlueField

Nvidia Datacenter/Server class CPU, codenamed Nvidia Grace, released in 2023[144]

[143]

Nvidia's product families include graphics processing units, wireless communication devices, and automotive hardware and software, such as:

Inception Program[edit]

Nvidia's Inception Program was created to support startups making exceptional advances in the fields of artificial intelligence and data science. Award winners are announced at Nvidia's GTC Conference. In May 2017, the program had 1,300 companies.[177] As of March 2018, there were 2,800 startups in the Inception Program.[178] As of August 2021, the program has surpassed 8,500 members in 90 countries, with cumulative funding of US$60 billion.[179]

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Official website

Nvidia Developer website

Bloomberg