Stephen Witt, a tech journalist and author of "The Thinking Machine," discusses Nvidia's monumental role in the AI revolution, highlighting how it shifted from gaming to a titan in microchip production under CEO Jensen Huang. Witt explains Nvidia's edge in parallel processors crucial for AI and the implications for global power dynamics, especially amid U.S.-China tensions. He argues that the traditional labor advantages may diminish with increasing automation, reshaping tech's geopolitical landscape and urging public engagement in AI's future.
31:23
forum Ask episode
web_stories AI Snips
view_agenda Chapters
menu_book Books
auto_awesome Transcript
info_circle Episode notes
question_answer ANECDOTE
Krizhevsky's AI System
Alex Krizhevsky built the first modern AI system in 2012 using NVIDIA gaming cards.
This system, built in his bedroom, became the foundation of modern AI and propelled NVIDIA's success.
insights INSIGHT
Huang's Vision
Jensen Huang, NVIDIA's co-founder, is a skilled engineer who prioritized technological advancement over immediate profit.
NVIDIA was initially considered second-tier to companies like Intel and Qualcomm.
insights INSIGHT
Huang's Future Vision
Huang envisions AI integration in everyday life, from entertainment to medical diagnoses.
He predicts AI-powered robots handling tasks like dishwashing within 5-10 years.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World's Most Coveted Microchip
Stephen Witt
The Thinking Machine tells the story of how Nvidia evolved from a video game component manufacturer to a leader in AI hardware, revolutionizing computer architecture. It highlights Jensen Huang's pivotal role in betting on AI, transforming Nvidia into one of the world's most valuable companies. The book explores Nvidia's impact on the future of technology, including AI-driven innovations like autonomous vehicles and hyper-realistic avatars.
The microchip maker Nvidia is a Silicon Valley colossus. After years as a runner-up to Intel and Qualcomm, Nvidia has all but cornered the market on the parallel processors essential for artificial-intelligence programs like ChatGPT. “Nvidia was there at the beginning of A.I.,” the tech journalist Stephen Witt tells David Remnick. “They really kind of made these systems work for the first time. We think of A.I. as a software revolution, something called neural nets, but A.I. is also a hardware revolution.” In The New Yorker, Stephen Witt profiled Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s brilliant and idiosyncratic co-founder and C.E.O. His new book is “The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World’s Most Coveted Microchip.” Until recently, Nvidia was the most valuable company in the world, but its stock price has been volatile, posting the largest single-day loss in history in January. But the company’s story is only partially a business story; it’s also one about global superpowers, and who will decide the future. If China takes military action against Taiwan, as it has indicated it might, the move could wrest control of the manufacturing of Nvidia microchips from a Taiwanese firm, which is now investing in a massive production facility in the U.S. “Maybe what’s happening,” Witt speculates, is that “this kind of labor advantage that Asia had over the United States for a long time, maybe in the age of robots that labor advantage is going to go away. And then it doesn’t matter where we put the factory. The only thing that matters is, you know, is there enough power to supply it?” Plus, the staff writer Joshua Rothman has long been fascinated with A.I.—he even interviewed its “godfather,” Geoffrey Hinton, for The New Yorker Radio Hour. But Rothman has become increasingly concerned about a lack of public and political debate over A.I.—and about how thoroughly it may transform our lives. “Often, if you talk to people who are really close to the technology, the timelines they quote for really reaching transformative levels of intelligence are, like, shockingly soon,” he tells Remnick. “If we’re worried about the incompetence of government, on whatever side of that you situate yourself, we should worry about automated government. For example, an A.I. decides the length of a sentence in a criminal conviction, or an A.I. decides whether you qualify for Medicaid. Basically, we’ll have less of a say in how things go and computers will have more of a say.” Rothman’s essay “Are We Taking A.I. Seriously Enough?” appears in his weekly column, Open Questions.