Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently visited China to celebrate Chinese New Year with employees and reaffirm the company’s commitment
(Yicai) Jan. 20 -- Jensen Huang, the chief executive of Nvidia, was in Beijing yesterday to attend the Chinese New Year celebration of the US chip giant's local subsidiary.
Meanwhile, a slew of other tech executives including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are reportedly set to attend the events on Monday.
Jensen Huang is set to tour the mainland Chinese cities of Shenzhen, Shanghai and Beijing, before flying to Taipei later this week.
Nvidia's chief executive Jensen Huang said on Friday he will not be attending U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration, but will instead be "on the road" celebrating the Lunar New Year with employees and their families.
Nvidia Corp. chief Jensen Huang is embarking on a trip to China this week, visiting major cities at a time Beijing is investigating his company’s domestic presence and Washington is slapping new curbs on the sale of its AI chips abroad.
The CEO also confirmed plans to attend similar celebrations in Beijing next week, as part of Nvidia’s efforts to engage with its workforce and partners across Asia.
Nvidia faces a significant revenue threat due to the latest U.S. export restrictions on artificial intelligence chips, designed to limit the global distribution of these coveted processors, analysts and investors said.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's trip to China is attracting widespread attention. Last week, Huang attended the annual meeting of Nvidia's Shenzhen branch, South China's Guangdong Province, Chinese news site thepaper.
The Chinese investors’ darling of 2024 is one of the nation’s best hopes in developing home-grown advanced graphics processors.
(Yicai) Jan. 17 -- After visiting Shenzhen, Jensen Huang, chief executive of American chip giant Nvidia, plans to travel to Shanghai and Beijing in the coming days before heading to Taipei, Yicai learned.
The U.S. is imposing some of its strongest measures yet to limit Chinese advances in AI, aiming to block backdoors in other countries that Beijing could use to access technology.