NVIDIA's GTC 2026 conference has been phenomenal in terms of latest computer chips and AI stack announcements. Here are the key updates you need to know: 1. The $1 Trillion Demand Projection: NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang raised demand projections for Blackwell and Vera Rubin systems to $1 trillion through 2027, driven by the explosive growth of AI inference. 2. Vera Rubin Architecture: The new platform features seven breakthrough chips, including the Vera CPU and Rubin GPU with HBM4 memory. It is designed as a vertically integrated "AI Factory" to handle agentic AI reasoning. 3. Groq3 LPX Inference Acceleration: Following a $20 billion deal, NVIDIA integrated Groq’s SRAM-based technology to create the Groq3 LPX rack. This system delivers up to 35x faster token generation for trillion-parameter models. 4. NemoClaw & OpenClaw: NVIDIA partnered with the viral open-source project OpenClaw to launch NemoClaw, a software stack described as the "operating system for personal AI". 5. Physical AI & Robotics: A highlight of the show was a robotic version of Olaf from Disney's Frozen, powered by NVIDIA’s Newton Physics Engine. NVIDIA also unveiled Alpamayo, an open-source "chain-of-thought" reasoning model for Level 4 autonomous driving. 6. Space Computing: NVIDIA announced Vera Rubin Space-1, a dedicated platform designed to bring AI data centres into orbit. 7. The "Feynman" Roadmap: A first look at the 2028 architecture, named Feynman, which will feature the Rosa CPU and next-generation liquid processing units (LPUs). 8. Gaming & DLSS 5: NVIDIA teased DLSS 5, which uses neural rendering to create photorealistic, real-time graphics that "look like a film". 9. Sovereign AI Factories: Broad partnerships with nations and enterprises (like IBM and Nestlé) were showcased to build regional "AI Factories" that keep data and intelligence within sovereign boundaries.
→ View original post on X — @avikumart_, 2026-03-17 22:40 UTC
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