Our US team writes:
Nvidia (NVDA) kicks off its annual GTC conference on March 18 with a keynote by CEO Jensen Huang from the SAP Center in San Jose, Calif. The event, which runs through March 21, will feature workshops and training for developers and engineers, panels and discussions related to AI and robotics, and exhibits from companies showing off how they’re using Nvidia’s products in the real world.
Huang is expected to debut the company’s latest flagship AI chip: the Blackwell Ultra. A souped-up version of Nvidia’s existing Blackwell chip, Blackwell Ultra should get a performance boost over last year’s chip to further speed up training and running AI models.
We should also learn more about Nvidia’s next-generation GPU platform, dubbed Rubin, and the successor to its Grace line of CPUs, Vera. The combined superchip will be called Vera Rubin, named for the American astronomer, and will take the place of the current Grace Blackwell superchip at the top of Nvidia’s hierarchy of AI processors.
During Nvidia’s fourth quarter earnings call, Huang teased that he’d also discuss the follow-up to Rubin. Nvidia, like most chip companies, is known for providing a broad look at its roadmap to help customers and developers prepare for their upcoming products.