Nvidia's RTX 5090 GPUs are available for "Preorders" on eBay by scalpers promising earlier access for prices that start at $3000 for the Founders Edition while shooting up to as much as a mammoth $7000 ask for the highest-end ASUS ROG ASTRAL OC SKU.
NVIDIA's new mysterious RTX Blackwell GPU spotted: features bonkers 96GB of GDDR7 memory on a 512-bit memory bus, new workstation GPU expected.
But what about Nvidia's prospects now? Where will the company and its stock be in 10 years? I won't pretend to have any definitive answers. However, I'll take a stab at where I think Nvidia will be in 2035.
In the Vulkan test, it scored 261,836 points. This is about 22% better than the RTX 4080. Not bad, right? But in OpenCL it scores 256,138 points, just a 6.7% improvement.
NVIDIA's next graphics card will feature 96GB of GDDR7 memory, if information on recently uncovered shipping manifests is accurate.
NVIDIA's new Blackwell GB202 GPU and GDDR7 memory get some utterly beautiful die shots, with ASUS ROG GeForce RTX 5090D Astral OC'd to 3.4GHz under LN2.
DLSS 4 is arguably the biggest selling point of the new RTX 50-series, but any Nvidia RTX GPU can benefit. Here's how.
In the RTX 5090, you’re getting new Neural Rendering features too — things that use an on-board AI trained with the game itself to boost fidelity and detail. Behind the scenes of any game, there’s a neural network running away to push a few key things.
Analysts at Jefferies recently ranked the so-called "Magnificent Seven" stocks based on which ones they thought would outperform in 2025. Its top picks among the group were Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG).
Chinese memory company Tongu announces HBM2 trial production: should find its way into Huawei AI chips, as HBM3E rules and HBM4 is on the horizon.
Dan Ives is not alone in selecting Nvidia as a top stock pick for 2025. Harsh Kumar at Piper Sandler recently wrote, "We are making Nvidia our top large-cap pick given the company's dominant position in AI accelerators and the upcoming launch of the Blackwell architecture."