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Today's retail sales data and Wednesday's Fed meeting highlight the week, along with Nvidia's GPU Technology Conference. FedEx, Micron, and Nike results are due later this week.Important DisclosuresThe information provided here is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before making any investment decision.All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice in reaction to shifting market conditions. Data contained herein from third-party providers is obtained from what are considered reliable sources. However, its accuracy, completeness, or reliability cannot be guaranteed.Examples provided are for illustrative purposes only and not intended to be reflective of results you can expect to achieve.The Schwab Center for Financial Research is a division of Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.All names and market data shown above are for illustrative purposes only and are not a recommendation, offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security. Supporting documentation for any claims or statistical information is available upon request.Past performance is no guarantee of future results, and the opinions presented cannot be viewed as an indicator of future performance.Investing involves risk, including loss of principal.Diversification strategies do not ensure a profit and do not protect against losses in declining markets.Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur management fees, costs, and expenses and cannot be invested in directly. For more information on indexes, please see schwab.com/indexdefinitions.The policy analysis provided by the Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., does not constitute and should not be interpreted as an endorsement of any political party.Fixed income securities are subject to increased loss of principal during periods of rising interest rates. Fixed income investments are subject to various other risks including changes in credit quality, market valuations, liquidity, prepayments, early redemption, corporate events, tax ramifications, and other factors.The Schwab Center for Financial Research is a division of Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.(0131-0325)
US equity markets rebounded strongly on Friday (14 March), with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq logging their best single session advance of 2025 to date - Dow rose +675-points or +1.66% Nvidia Corp (up +5.27%) was the leading performer in the 30-stock index ahead of the chipmaker's off its weeklong GPU Technology Conference in San Jose, California kicking off tonight AEST, with a keynote address from Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jensen Huang on Tuesday night AEST (18 March). American Express Co (+3.59%), investment banks Goldman Sach Group Inc (+3.17%) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (+3.22%) all climbed over >3%.
Last week's comments from Nvidia's (NVDA) CEO on the timeline for quantum tech led to a sell-off. With quantum stocks rallying again, Nvidia announced its own Quantum Day at the 2025 GPU Technology Conference in March. Jenny Horne takes a closer look into the event and notes other companies like Microsoft (MSFT) jumping back on the quantum train. ======== Schwab Network ======== Empowering every investor and trader, every market day. Subscribe to the Market Minute newsletter - https://schwabnetwork.com/subscribe Download the iOS app - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/schwab-network/id1460719185 Download the Amazon Fire Tv App - https://www.amazon.com/TD-Ameritrade-Network/dp/B07KRD76C7 Watch on Sling - https://watch.sling.com/1/asset/191928615bd8d47686f94682aefaa007/watch Watch on Vizio - https://www.vizio.com/en/watchfreeplus-explore Watch on DistroTV - https://www.distro.tv/live/schwab-network/ Follow us on X – https://twitter.com/schwabnetwork Follow us on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/schwabnetwork Follow us on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/schwab-network/ About Schwab Network - https://schwabnetwork.com/about
US equity markets retreated as Treasury yields continued to climb on the eve of the Federal Reserve's latest interest rate decision - Dow down -313-points or -1.01%, falling as much as -550-points earlier in the session. The broader S&P500 fell -1.13%, with Real Estate (down -2.57%) and Materials (-1.90%) leading all eleven primary sectors lower. Ford Motor Co tumbled -12.32% to log its worst single session drop since 2011 after the automaker told investors after the close of the previous session that it saw a +US$1B increase in supply chain costs during the third quarter. General Motors Co fell -5.63%. The Nasdaq -0.95%. Apple Inc rose +1.57% after announcing price rises for the app store in a number of Asian and European countries, likely a response to the surge in the U.S. dollar. Nvidia Corp (down -1.54%) hosted their GPU Technology Conference overnight and said that the launch of its next generation of gaming cards is well positioned. The RTX 4090 Gaming chips using the company's next-generation “Ada Lovelace” architecture, said to perform up to four times faster than its previous generation RTX 3090 Ti, will be available on 12 October for a suggested retail price of US$1,599. Following the keynote address, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jensen Huang told analysts that while gaming end markets are soft, they're not so soft that Nvidia won't be able to sell excess inventory it has in the channel. The Dow Jones Transport Average, viewed as a barometer of economic health, dropped -2.27% to a near 19-month low, with all 20 components retreating. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 lost -1.40%.
US equity markets retreated as Treasury yields continued to climb on the eve of the Federal Reserve's latest interest rate decision - Dow down -313-points or -1.01%, falling as much as -550-points earlier in the session. The broader S&P500 fell -1.13%, with Real Estate (down -2.57%) and Materials (-1.90%) leading all eleven primary sectors lower. Ford Motor Co tumbled -12.32% to log its worst single session drop since 2011 after the automaker told investors after the close of the previous session that it saw a +US$1B increase in supply chain costs during the third quarter. General Motors Co fell -5.63%. The Nasdaq -0.95%. Apple Inc rose +1.57% after announcing price rises for the app store in a number of Asian and European countries, likely a response to the surge in the U.S. dollar. Nvidia Corp (down -1.54%) hosted their GPU Technology Conference overnight and said that the launch of its next generation of gaming cards is well positioned. The RTX 4090 Gaming chips using the company's next-generation “Ada Lovelace” architecture, said to perform up to four times faster than its previous generation RTX 3090 Ti, will be available on 12 October for a suggested retail price of US$1,599. Following the keynote address, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jensen Huang told analysts that while gaming end markets are soft, they're not so soft that Nvidia won't be able to sell excess inventory it has in the channel. The Dow Jones Transport Average, viewed as a barometer of economic health, dropped -2.27% to a near 19-month low, with all 20 components retreating. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 lost -1.40%.
We lay out all the things Nvidia announced at its GPU Technology Conference including new AI avatars, the 3D virtual world simulation and collaboration platform Omniverse, and the NeMo Megatron, the company's open source large language model platform.Starring Tom Merritt, Patrick Norton, Roger Chang, Joe.Link to the Show Notes. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We lay out all the things Nvidia announced at its GPU Technology Conference including new AI avatars, the 3D virtual world simulation and collaboration platform Omniverse, and the NeMo Megatron, the company's open source large language model platform. Starring Tom Merritt, Patrick Norton, Roger Chang, Joe, Amos MP3 Download Using a Screen Reader? Click hereContinue reading "Artisanal Taxi Service – DTNS 4149"
We lay out all the things Nvidia announced at its GPU Technology Conference including new AI avatars, the 3D virtual world simulation and collaboration platform Omniverse, and the NeMo Megatron, the company's open source large language model platform. Starring Tom Merritt, Patrick Norton, Roger Chang, Joe, Amos MP3 Download Using a Screen Reader? Click here Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org Follow us on Twitter Instgram YouTube and Twitch Please SUBSCRIBE HERE. Subscribe through Apple Podcasts. A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible. If you are willing to support the show or to give as little as 10 cents a day on Patreon, Thank you! Become a Patron! Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme! Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo! Thanks to our mods Jack_Shid and KAPT_Kipper on the subreddit Send to email to feedback@dailytechnewsshow.com Show Notes To read the show notes in a separate page click here!
Modest gains for the benchmark US equity indices after Congress approved an infrastructure spending package, with the S&P500 logging its first close above >4,700 - Dow up +104-points or +0.29% to a record closing high 36,432.22. Caterpillar Inc rose +4.07% to be the leading index performer. The broader S&P500 inched +0.09% higher to log its eighth consecutive record closing high at 4,701.72, marking the longest series of all-time highs since 1997, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Materials (up +1.23%) led six of the eleven primary sectors higher, while more defensive sectors underperformed. Utilities (down -1.45%) and Consumer Discretionary (-1.38%) both fell over >1%. Tesla Inc fell -4.84% founder Elon Musk rattled investors over the weekend, asking in a Twitter poll whether he should sell 10% of his stock as a response to political clamouring to tax unrealised gains from equity holdings (58% of respondents said yes). Airlines climbed (Delta Air Lines Inc up +0.81%, United Airlines Holdings Inc +0.76% and American Airlines Group Inc +1.97%) after the US ended its pandemic-era international travel ban overnight. The Nasdaq inched +0.07% higher to 15,982.36 and registered its 11th straight gain and the longest such win streak since 26 December, 2019. Advanced Micro Devices Inc soared +10.14% after the company announced new products during its Accelerated Data Centre Premiere and disclosed that Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc would use its Epyc processors. Chipmaking peer Nvidia Corp rose +3.40% as the company's annual GPU Technology Conference kicked off overnight. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 also inched +0.07% higher.
Modest gains for the benchmark US equity indices after Congress approved an infrastructure spending package, with the S&P500 logging its first close above >4,700 - Dow up +104-points or +0.29% to a record closing high 36,432.22. Caterpillar Inc rose +4.07% to be the leading index performer. The broader S&P500 inched +0.09% higher to log its eighth consecutive record closing high at 4,701.72, marking the longest series of all-time highs since 1997, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Materials (up +1.23%) led six of the eleven primary sectors higher, while more defensive sectors underperformed. Utilities (down -1.45%) and Consumer Discretionary (-1.38%) both fell over >1%. Tesla Inc fell -4.84% founder Elon Musk rattled investors over the weekend, asking in a Twitter poll whether he should sell 10% of his stock as a response to political clamouring to tax unrealised gains from equity holdings (58% of respondents said yes). Airlines climbed (Delta Air Lines Inc up +0.81%, United Airlines Holdings Inc +0.76% and American Airlines Group Inc +1.97%) after the US ended its pandemic-era international travel ban overnight. The Nasdaq inched +0.07% higher to 15,982.36 and registered its 11th straight gain and the longest such win streak since 26 December, 2019. Advanced Micro Devices Inc soared +10.14% after the company announced new products during its Accelerated Data Centre Premiere and disclosed that Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc would use its Epyc processors. Chipmaking peer Nvidia Corp rose +3.40% as the company's annual GPU Technology Conference kicked off overnight. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 also inched +0.07% higher.
We discuss the announcements from last week's GPU Technology Conference, along with AI hardware news from elsewhere, and look at Microsoft's proposed acquisition of language AI specialist Nuance for $16 billion – actually closer to $20bn once you account for debt. We start with our regular segment chronicling the revolution in hardware for AI – it's Chip Wars! When Joe Biden is waving around silicon wafers, you know interesting things are going to happen. Nvidia is busy building its first ever CPU to support machine learning workloads, codenamed Grace – after the absolute legend that was rear admiral Grace Hopper. Plus, Nvidia's DGX family of ‘building blocks' for supercomputers will now feature Data Processing Units (DPUs) by default, running a wide variety of networking tasks. DPUs weren't originally developed at Nvidia – these came out of the Mellanox acquisition, which equipped the company with clever networking silicon. Intel's Habana – which has designed its own family of chips for AI – has landed a contract with the San Diego Supercomputer Center, and will build a supercomputer called Voyage. But is it the kind of customer that Intel needs at this point? Meanwhile, SambaNova – which has designed its own family of chips for AI – has announced a massive $676 million funding round, just a few mounts after emerging from stealth. Its CEO Rodrigo Liang appeared on this podcast just a few short weeks ago – making participation a sure indicator of future success. Next, we talk about Nuance, the AI company built from countless acquisitions, now being acquired by Microsoft. The speech recognition and language specialist has helped shape the emerging virtual assistant market – can it give Cortana a shot in the arm? We also cover: Shopping for prying mantises! The importance of haircuts! Chaos at Arm China! And there's even a rendition of the national anthem of the USSR. As always, you can find the people responsible for the circus podcast online: Max Smolaks (@maxsmolax) Sebastian Moss (@SebMoss) Tien Fu (@tienchifu) Ben Wodecki (@benwodecki)
Jeff Herbst is a fixture of the AI startup ecosystem. Which makes sense since he’s the VP of business development at NVIDIA and head of NVIDIA Inception, a virtual accelerator that currently has over 6,000 members in a wide range of industries. Ahead of the GPU Technology Conference, taking place Oct. 5-9, Herbst joined AI Podcast host Noah Kravitz to talk about what opportunities are available to startups at the conference, and how NVIDIA Inception is accelerating startups in every industry. Learn more about NVIDIA Inception at https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/deep-learning-ai/startups/ Follow Jeff Herbst at @jeffatNvdia
Both Segments: Computer and Technology News.Topics:Lyft joins Uber in threatening to pull out of California over driver status – The VergeNVIDIA's GPU Technology Conference goes online in October | EngadgetIntel's run at the GPU market begins with Tiger Lake onboard graphics | Ars TechnicaIntel Tiger Lake Core i7-1165G7 4 Core CPU On Par With AMD Renoir Ryzen 7 4700U 8 Core CPUEpic says Apple threatens ‘catastrophic' response in two weeks if Fortnite doesn't comply with rules – The VergeZTE's Axon 20 5G will have the first under-display camera | EngadgetOppo's next flagship will use a custom Sony sensor with faster autofocus | EngadgetSecret Service bought location data pulled from common apps | EngadgetColgate's latest AI-powered smart toothbrush starts at $50 | EngadgetFor full show notes, check out ComputerAmerica.com!
Listen live from the GPU Technology Conference 2019 (GTC), NVIDIA's annual event around the latest in AI, deep learning, HPC, and more. This year, Pure Storage was a platinum sponsor and in this episode you'll hear from three Pure experts about how modern solutions using FlashBlade and AIRI are improving time-to-insight and simplifying the deployment and operation of infrastructure for AI and analytics. For more information: https://www.purestorage.com/au/solutions/applications/artificial-intelligence.html
This week the Embedded Insiders are joined by Steven Crouch, CTO of Blackmore Lidar, who discusses FM lidar and its impact on the automotive market. We also recap what went on at the GPU Technology Conference this year. Tune in for more.
The huge truck cab couldn't have been any more conspicuous. It dominated the back of the main showroom at the recent GPU Technology Conference in San Jose, California, and attracted plenty of attention. The all-electric prototype from TuSimple is aimed at providing cheaper, more-efficient long-hauling trucking. TuSimple, with offices in China and the United States, is among numerous startups working to automate parts of the long-haul trucking and parcel delivery industries. The Chinese electric car XPENG was part of the recent GPU Technolgy Conference in San Jose. As part of the technology, semi-trucks would be allowed to operate beyond the 11-hour daily restriction for human drivers. Bruce Aldrich and James Raia, co-hosts of The Weekly Driver Podcast, interview with Xiaodi Hou, the chief technology officer of TuSimple, as our second guest on our latest episode. With another company representative, we conduct the interview inside the cavernous TuSimple cab. We discuss the future of the autonomous truck industry and the company's experiences testing its technology. During the episode, all recorded at the conference held at the San Jose Convention Center, will also speak with Robert Liu of XPENG Motors and first guest Cameron Gieda from AutonomouStuff. Liu is the director of program management for the Chinese electric vehicle and technology company based in Beijing but with an office in San Jose. Gieda, the regional sales manager of the AutonomouStuff, discusses the San Jose-based company's position as a supplier R&D platforms, products, software and engineering services for the advancement of robotics and autonomy systems. The Weekly Driver encourages and appreciates feedback from our listeners. Please forward episode links to family, friends and colleagues. And you are welcome to repost links from the podcast to your social media accounts. Support our podcast by shopping on Amazon.com. Please send comments and suggestions for new episodes to James Raia via email: james@jamesraia.com. All episodes of the podcast are archived on www.theweeklydriver.com/twd-podcast Every episode is also available on your preferred podcast platform: Google Play iTunes Spotify Stitcher The Weekly Driver Podcast is presented by www.americanmuscle.com.
Addison Snell and Tiffany Trader analyze the Nvidia GTC conference and the latest announcement on the DOE Exascale project.
This week’s top stories include Nvidia’s annual GPU Technology Conference, the U.S. Exascale supercomputer deal, and the latest jury verdict on the Qualcomm v. Apple patent infringement case.
NVIDIA unveils Constellation Drive and more at the company's GPU Technology Conference. NVIDIA's Director of Automotive Danny Shapiro joins Princeton's Alain Kornhauser and co-host Fred Fishkin for a special edition of the Smart Driving Cars podcast! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/smart-driving-cars-podcast/support
Robots following coded instructions to complete a task? Old school. Robots learning to do things by watching how humans do it? That’s the future. Earlier this year, Stanford’s Animesh Garg and Marynel Vázquez shared their research in a talk on “Generalizable Autonomy for Robotic Mobility and Manipulation” at the GPU Technology Conference last week. We caught up with them to learn more about generalizable autonomy - the idea that a robot should be able to observe human behavior, and learn to imitate it in a way that’s applicable to a variety of tasks and situations. Like learning to cook by watching YouTube videos, or figuring out how to cross a crowded room for another.
Wayne Thompson was into big data, before big data was cool. Now the world — even much of our GPU Technology Conference — revolves around the kinds of challenges the 25-year veteran of analytics software developer SAS Institute has made a career of helping enterprises master. How did that happen? We asked Thomson, Chief Data Scientist of SAS Data Science Technologies to talk about the big data, big models, and big computations driving deep learning, and to give us some perspective about what makes today’s deep learning technologies different.
GDDR6 Memory from SK hynix has debuted at NVIDIA's GPU Technology Conference 2018 and it will be a gamechanger for mining altcoins. Not only will there be an architectural difference in the way that the next-generation of GPUs are produced, but they will also be paired with memory twice as fast as GDDR5, a major component in the calculation ability for mining cryptocurrency algorithms. Bitmain's recent debut of alternative cryptocurrency ASIC miners will now have a new standard of computation that they have to measure against. The post GDDR6 and the New Era of Mining (Episode 13) appeared first on Altcoins Anonymous.
One of the things that makes the weather so dangerous is that it's so hard to predict. Tornadoes, hail, high winds and flash floods cause billions of dollars worth of property damage, and injure or kill hundreds of people in the United States each year. Knowing when storms may strike can save lives, and property. Our guest is part of a team at the National Center for Atmospheric Research that's doing just that. We spoke with David John Gagne, a postdoctoral fellow at the National Center for Atmospheric Research about his work with deep learning at the GPU Technology Conference in Silicon Valley this week.
Hakuro Matsuda さんをゲストに迎えて、Intel, AMD, Jeff Dean, iMac Pro, Apple TV, ネット中立性などについて話しました。 Show Notes Intel to Create new 8th Generation CPUs with AMD Radeon Graphics AMD Ryzen™ | AMD Larrabee (microarchitecture) Rasterization on Larrabee | Intel® Software Raja Koduri Joins Intel as Chief Architect to Drive Vision across Cores, Visual Computing Snapdragon 845 Mobile Platform | Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 could introduce the next generation of Windows 10 on ARM Don’t buy the first-gen Qualcomm-powered Windows 10 laptops GPU Technology Conference 2018 Machine Learning Developer Meetup Tokyo The Case for Learned Index Structures ある時Jeff Deanは休暇でギリシャに出かけた AlphaGo Zero: Learning from scratch | DeepMind DeepMind's AlphaZero AI clobbered rival chess app on non-level playing, er, board Rebuild: 134: Everything Becomes N (N, hak) AlphaGo iMac Pro - Apple MKBHD: iMac Pro: 1 Week Impressions! iMac Pro Features Apple's Custom T2 Chip With Secure Boot Capabilities niw/HapticKey Apple TV 4K - Apple tvOS 11.2 fixes Apple TV 4K's biggest problem Amazon Prime Video comes to Apple TV, finally Daring Fireball: Amazon Prime Video Arrives on Apple TV Apple TV Markup Language Reference: About TVML TVer Amazon Fire TV Google and Amazon are in “productive” talks to keep YouTube on Fire TV F.C.C. Repeals Net Neutrality Rules Pro-Neutrality, Anti-Title II The FCC OKs Zero-Rating—But Net Neutrality Pays the Price いまさら聞けない「ゼロレーティング」入門 Major League Baseball blackout policy
AI systems have been trained to take photos and transform them into the style of great artists like Van Gogh, Picasso, or J.M.W. Turner. Take a photo, pick a style, and what emerges looks kind of like the lost work of an artistic master. Now, AI is heading in a different artistic direction: music. The soaring music featured on today's podcast, which made its debut at our GPU Technology Conference, was composed by an AI system developed by our guest, Pierre Barreau, head of Luxembourg-based startup Aiva Technologies.
Are AI and VR the peanut butter and chocolate of computing? Are they a match made in heaven? We spoke with Michael Ludden, who heads up IBM Watson's AI and VR labs, about how these two technologies intersect at this week's GPU Technology Conference.