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OK, so the end of data for training models is another major bottleneck for AI, and what Jensen is talking about here with Cosmos is generating new data that subsequent models can be trained on (synthetic data), since these models have already consumed all the existing data it could be trained on.
However.
I wonder how Cosmos will avoid model collapse.
OK, sorry about that folks, we were dealing with some technical difficulties, but we’re back to the action, and that action is all about tokens. It’s tokens all the way down.
OK, the virtual human thing is still giving major uncanny valley, but it’s less severe than it used to be.
Coding assistants are the death knell for the junior software developer. So much for ‘learn to code’.
Oh man, I just had a dark thought. Can you imagine training the AI agent that’s taking your job? That’s grim.
I want to say, I find all of this AI discussion interesting from an academic perspective, but I think there’s a lot of expectations for these data centers, and no one is mentioning that the power requirements for these are pretty much going to put a cap on what they can do, since we only have so much electrical power available on a grid at any one time.
So we have fully entered into the data center segment of the keynote. While GeForce graphics cards got at least a bit more time and attention than Lovelace got, it’s clear that these cards aren’t as important to Nvidia as the data center business.
And yeah, that shield bit was a bit…well, it was something.
Nvidia GeForce RTX 5000 series mobile GPUs are also coming, with the RTX 5070 mobile featuring RTX 4090 performance, though I’m guessing Jensen means RTX 4090 mobile performance.
Also, the RTX 5000 series will be available starting in January, though we don’t know which will be coming first.
If the shader cores can also carry the weight of AI workloads, as Jensen stated, then we’re getting way better DLSS on these cards.
OK, so very little on specs, but I want to know about this AI management processor.
OK, RTX 5090 starting at $1,999. RTX 5080 for $999. RTX 5070 Ti for $749. Yes, absolutely. This is what I want to see.
Don’t get me wrong, these are still expensive graphics cards, but given the fears of a $1600 RTX 5080, this is a very pleasant surprise.
OK, RTX 5070 at $549, RTX 4090 performance. Whoa.
OK, so Jensen is holding the RTX 5090.
Nvidia RTX Blackwell is official, and that is a very pretty looking graphics card.
That was a pretty impressive demo.
OK, the first mention of GeForce, so here we go.
That was a very short Virtua Fighter demo.
LOL, Jensen’s jacket is bedazzled.
Tokens, tokens, tokens. It’s no surprise that we’re just jumping right into AI, but yeah, it’s remarkable how much Nvidia has transformed almost overnight.
OK, NOW we’re kicking things off.
OK, the Nvidia segment of the keynote is about to begin, but it sure is taking a while. Nvidia is normally quicker to launch than this.
OK, I unironically love ‘Never gonna give you up.’ I used to rollerskate to that song as a kid.
CTA President Gary Shapiro is introducing Jensen Huang.
OK, I DO want an exoskeleton. Those things look cool as hell.
OK, here we go.
The biggest thing I’m expecting tonight is Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 5090, RTX 5080, and possibly the RTX 5070 Ti.
Following up Nvidia’s Lovelace GPUs, the Blackwell-based RTX 5000 series is expected to be substantially more powerful, with the rumor mill putting the RTX 5080 around 10% faster than the RTX 4090, currently the best graphics card on the consumer market.
That, of course, would put the RTX 5090 in a class entirely on its own, and there’s no telling where its performance will ultimately end up. That said, if speculation is on the mark, it should feature 32GB GDDR7 VRAM with a memory bandwidth of 1.52TB/s on a 512-bit memory bus, making it truly the world’s first 8K gaming graphics card.
OK folks, we’re coming up on the 15 minutes from the start of Nvidia’s CES 2025 keynote, where CEO Jensen Huang will take the state at Madalay Bay’s Michelob arena. We’re expecting some major news tonight, so for those who’ve been waiting to hear about Nvidia’s next-gen consumer graphics cards, you don’t much longer to wait.
And if you really want to hear all about data center AI and Omniverse stuff, I’m sure Jensen will get around to those as well.
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John.Loeffler@futurenet.com (John Loeffler)