The Nvidia founder's bold playbook shows how great leaders perform consistently in both good times and in bad.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled the new Jetson Orin Nano Super that can be used to run artificial applications locally.
Years before he became a tech billionaire, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was reportedly a teenager scrubbing floors to earn money for table tennis tournaments.
Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, has recorded one of the most significant wealth increases of 2024, ranking just behind Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg in net worth gains. According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Huang’s fortune surged by $76 billion this year, surpassing Jeff Bezos, the world’s second-richest individual.
NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang will don his trademark leather jacket at CES 2025 with a huge keynote: expect RTX 50 series GPUs, and SO much more.
When I read that statistic from Harvard Business Law Review, I was hoping the article would include an analysis of what that tiny—but in my mind most successful—subset of founders do differently from the other 99.
Huang’s wealth now stands at $118.7 billion, making him the 11th richest person globally, according to Forbes. The stock closed at $135.74 per share on Wednesday, gaining $5.35 in a single day as Wall Street analysts reiterated their bullish stance on the company.
The palm-sized Orin Nano is ideal for hobbyists and small companies looking to run AI applications locally, such as for use in industrial robots.
But unless you're closely following Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, you may not comprehend just how big AI can get. Huang has used the term "sovereign AI" in past discussions. He just gave investors a look at what it really means and why it is great news for Nvidia shareholders.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s net worth surged to $117 billion in 2024, reflecting significant growth compared to billionaires Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk.
"I’m looking to detect the weak signals. It’s easy to pick up the strong signals, but I want to intercept them when they are weak."
The newly released book, , reveals key insights into Nvidia's corporate culture. A notable aspect is CEO Jensen Huang's preference for whiteboards over PowerPoint presentations during business discussions.