T he Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 was only fully revealed this week at CES 2025, but already the GPU is causing quite a stir. Though arguably the least powerful of the just unveiled 50
CES 2025 finally gave us a look at Nvidia's new RTX 5000 series of graphics cards, and the flagship RTX 5090 GPU's performance capabilities compared to the last generation's RTX 4090 - but early benchmarks for its laptop GPU don't look very promising.
As anticipated, Nvidia Monday kicked off its CES 2025 keynote by unveiling the new RTX Blackwell family of GPUs. The centerpiece of the line is the RTX
CES NVIDIA's memory and storage play an important role in AI training and inference and his presentation showed how they enable modern AI solutions.
The biggest, baddest GPU at CES is also shockingly small. Adam got Nvidia's Director of Products to tell us how they did it.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been one of the best stocks to own for some time, and it was right under many investors' noses for a while. Nvidia makes graphics processing units (GPUs), which were originally intended for gaming graphics but quickly found many more use cases.
OK, maybe you wouldn't pay three grand for a Project DIGITS PC. But what about a $1,000 Blackwell PC from Acer, Asus, or Lenovo?
In a tour de force CES keynote, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang explored the multi-trillion dollar opportunities with the ongoing evolution of AI.
Project DIGITS is meant to work alongside a desktop PC, giving AI developers, data scientists, and students a convenient way to access a Blackwell GPU. But the product won't be cheap.
The first Geekbench 6 results (via BenchLeaks on X) for Nvidia’s RTX 5090 laptop GPU are here. They show extremely poor performance consistency, though that's hardly surprising considering the early nature of the hardware and the test application.