Burger King gave candy to a worker has worked for more than 20 years.
The Whopper, which was first introduced in 1957, was a quarter-pound, oversized burger on a vast five-inch bun that cost a reasonable 29 cents.Large corporations can be cruel and uncaring. They often claim to care about their employees, but sometimes the reality can be quite different. This is the story of Kevin Ford, a cook and cashier at Burger King who had worked tirelessly for over two decades. To celebrate his remarkable feat of never taking a sick day, Burger King decided to shower him ...
Someone crashed the entire Onion market in America, made millions, walked away scott-free and starte…
We learnt that perfect monopoly can cause catastrophic damage to any economy, even the onion market.A tiny man who rocked America with Onions History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. You want to learn something, anything? Look back in history and it will surprise you just how eerily relevant it can be even in modern times. With the advent of Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, Tech titans and startups, you get all sorts of happenings like Tulip Mania, recessions, Feds stepping in, market manipulations a...
The youngest self-made billionaire just bought Forbes.
Austin Russell is an American entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies. Luminar specializes in lidar and machine perception technologies, mainly used in autonomous cars. Luminar went public in December 2020, making him the world’s youngest self-made billionaire at the age of 25.Wha’s up with billionaires and news media? In a stunning turn of events, Austin Russell, the youngest self-made billionaire of 2021, has made headlines once again by acquiring a majority stake in Forbes ma...
CEO of StartupX | DeFi, NFT, Crypto, Web3.0 Builder | Co-Founder at IxSA | Director of Startup Weekend Singapore | Sustainability Champion
Burger King gave candy to a worker has worked for more than 20 years.
The Whopper, which was first introduced in 1957, was a quarter-pound, oversized burger on a vast five-inch bun that cost a reasonable 29 cents.Large corporations can be cruel and uncaring. They often claim to care about their employees, but sometimes the reality can be quite different. This is the story of Kevin Ford, a cook and cashier at Burger King who had worked tirelessly for over two decades. To celebrate his remarkable feat of never taking a sick day, Burger King decided to shower him ...
Someone crashed the entire Onion market in America, made millions, walked away scott-free and starte…
We learnt that perfect monopoly can cause catastrophic damage to any economy, even the onion market.A tiny man who rocked America with Onions History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. You want to learn something, anything? Look back in history and it will surprise you just how eerily relevant it can be even in modern times. With the advent of Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, Tech titans and startups, you get all sorts of happenings like Tulip Mania, recessions, Feds stepping in, market manipulations a...
The youngest self-made billionaire just bought Forbes.
Austin Russell is an American entrepreneur, founder and CEO of Luminar Technologies. Luminar specializes in lidar and machine perception technologies, mainly used in autonomous cars. Luminar went public in December 2020, making him the world’s youngest self-made billionaire at the age of 25.Wha’s up with billionaires and news media? In a stunning turn of events, Austin Russell, the youngest self-made billionaire of 2021, has made headlines once again by acquiring a majority stake in Forbes ma...
CEO of StartupX | DeFi, NFT, Crypto, Web3.0 Builder | Co-Founder at IxSA | Director of Startup Weekend Singapore | Sustainability Champion

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Guess who is the biggest winner of the AI boom?
The one selling the chips to process all that code and programming.
Step into Jensen Huang’s world.
Imagine a world where you can simply talk to your computer and it understands what you want — no more cryptic lines of code, no more missing semicolons causing code meltdowns.
It sounds like a sci-fi dream, right?
Jensen, the CEO of Nvidia, believes this reality is knocking at our digital doors.
Fresh off Nvidia’s meteoric earnings report and a stock rally that left Wall Street dazzled, Huang, the visionary leader of Nvidia, is boldly claiming that we’re on the cusp of a “new computing era.”

Huang’s assertion that “everyone is a programmer” mirrors the era-defining sentiments of past tech leaders.
Coding becomes as simple as talking to a friend — or a computer.
Picture this: you casually tell your computer what you want, and voilà, it delivers — thanks to generative artificial intelligence.
No coding woes, just simple communication.
And if that doesn’t scream AWESOME, I don’t know what does.
Huang’s declaration, made during his keynote at the Computex forum in Taiwan, comes with a cherry on top: a new AI supercomputer platform named DGX GH200, designed to build generative AI models.
It is as if Picasso’s brush strokes met the world of coding.

This computer, Huang says, is all about comprehension. No more deciphering cryptic syntax; it’s all about understanding intent.
Now, you might be thinking, “Is this just another tech bubble?”
Perhaps.
But Nvidia believes that generative AI is the “most important computing platform of our generation.”
This isn’t just about shiny new apps; it’s about supercharging old ones.
Creative professionals can conjure images from mere text, programmers can turbocharge application development, and architects can transform 2D plans into 3D models in an instant.
The digital divide is bridged; everyone can now be a programmer, without a deep dive into arcane code.
Nvidia’s journey to the trillion-dollar club isn’t all roses and sunshine.
It’s a saga of innovation, perseverance, and some calculated risks.
Founded in 1993, Nvidia initially swam in the world of graphics processing units (GPUs).
Fast forward to today, and they’re not just a chipmaker; they’re an AI powerhouse.
Their GPUs are the beating heart of everything from gaming rigs to data centers.
They’re powering the AI revolution that’s reshaping industries far and wide.

Jensen has been in the game for decades, and he is still killing it.
Nations are buying billions of dollars’ worth of chips from them.
Can Nvidia keep up the pace?
Competition with AMD and Intel is heating up and their lead might not last.
Will their foray into generative AI be a groundbreaking reality or a tech fable?
Can the end user and average joe really enjoy the benefits of it?
Are they really worth a trillion?
Or will the hype die down after a while?
For all we know, we might be looking back and thinking just how “cheap” Nvidia stocks are now.
-
Is Nvidia worth a trillion?
-
#NvidiaJourney #AIRevolution #TechInnovation #jensen #huang #aiboom #ai #generativeAI #gpu #processors #chips #aiboom #chips

Guess who is the biggest winner of the AI boom?
The one selling the chips to process all that code and programming.
Step into Jensen Huang’s world.
Imagine a world where you can simply talk to your computer and it understands what you want — no more cryptic lines of code, no more missing semicolons causing code meltdowns.
It sounds like a sci-fi dream, right?
Jensen, the CEO of Nvidia, believes this reality is knocking at our digital doors.
Fresh off Nvidia’s meteoric earnings report and a stock rally that left Wall Street dazzled, Huang, the visionary leader of Nvidia, is boldly claiming that we’re on the cusp of a “new computing era.”

Huang’s assertion that “everyone is a programmer” mirrors the era-defining sentiments of past tech leaders.
Coding becomes as simple as talking to a friend — or a computer.
Picture this: you casually tell your computer what you want, and voilà, it delivers — thanks to generative artificial intelligence.
No coding woes, just simple communication.
And if that doesn’t scream AWESOME, I don’t know what does.
Huang’s declaration, made during his keynote at the Computex forum in Taiwan, comes with a cherry on top: a new AI supercomputer platform named DGX GH200, designed to build generative AI models.
It is as if Picasso’s brush strokes met the world of coding.

This computer, Huang says, is all about comprehension. No more deciphering cryptic syntax; it’s all about understanding intent.
Now, you might be thinking, “Is this just another tech bubble?”
Perhaps.
But Nvidia believes that generative AI is the “most important computing platform of our generation.”
This isn’t just about shiny new apps; it’s about supercharging old ones.
Creative professionals can conjure images from mere text, programmers can turbocharge application development, and architects can transform 2D plans into 3D models in an instant.
The digital divide is bridged; everyone can now be a programmer, without a deep dive into arcane code.
Nvidia’s journey to the trillion-dollar club isn’t all roses and sunshine.
It’s a saga of innovation, perseverance, and some calculated risks.
Founded in 1993, Nvidia initially swam in the world of graphics processing units (GPUs).
Fast forward to today, and they’re not just a chipmaker; they’re an AI powerhouse.
Their GPUs are the beating heart of everything from gaming rigs to data centers.
They’re powering the AI revolution that’s reshaping industries far and wide.

Jensen has been in the game for decades, and he is still killing it.
Nations are buying billions of dollars’ worth of chips from them.
Can Nvidia keep up the pace?
Competition with AMD and Intel is heating up and their lead might not last.
Will their foray into generative AI be a groundbreaking reality or a tech fable?
Can the end user and average joe really enjoy the benefits of it?
Are they really worth a trillion?
Or will the hype die down after a while?
For all we know, we might be looking back and thinking just how “cheap” Nvidia stocks are now.
-
Is Nvidia worth a trillion?
-
#NvidiaJourney #AIRevolution #TechInnovation #jensen #huang #aiboom #ai #generativeAI #gpu #processors #chips #aiboom #chips
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