Nvidia says its H100 Tensor Core GPU, using the Hopper architecture, is in full production and will begin shipping in October in products from eight vendors (Benj Edwards/Ars Technica)

Benj Edwards / Ars Technica:
Nvidia says its H100 Tensor Core GPU, using the Hopper architecture, is in full production and will begin shipping in October in products from eight vendors  —  Nvidia’s H100 “Hopper” GPU is in full production, eight major vendors shipping products soon.  —  At today’s GTC conference keynote …

Related Articles

EVGA stops making video cards, citing conflicts with Nvidia and ending a partnership started in 1999; Nvidia’s GeForce reportedly makes up 80% of EVGA’s revenue (Andrew Cunningham/Ars Technica)

Andrew Cunningham / Ars Technica:
EVGA stops making video cards, citing conflicts with Nvidia and ending a partnership started in 1999; Nvidia’s GeForce reportedly makes up 80% of EVGA’s revenue  —  EVGA will continue selling current-gen GeForce cards until it runs out of stock.  —  Graphics card manufacturer eVGA …

Nvidia says the US agreed to let it continue developing its H100 enterprise AI chip in China; Nvidia stock is down 11%+ after warning about export restrictions (Kif Leswing/CNBC)

Kif Leswing / CNBC:
Nvidia says the US agreed to let it continue developing its H100 enterprise AI chip in China; Nvidia stock is down 11%+ after warning about export restrictions  —  – Nvidia said on Thursday that the U.S. Government told the company it can continue to develop its H100 artificial intelligence chip in China.

Google announces the Tensor G2 SoC, giving Pixel users new camera features, like Night Sight and Face Unblur, while retaining a similar architecture to the G1 (Frederic Lardinois/TechCrunch)

Frederic Lardinois / TechCrunch:
Google announces the Tensor G2 SoC, giving Pixel users new camera features, like Night Sight and Face Unblur, while retaining a similar architecture to the G1  —  As expected, Google today launched its newest line of Pixel phones and — finally — the Pixel Watch.

With AI image generation tools like Stable Diffusion and DreamBooth, it’s easy to make damaging deepfakes using just a few images of a person from social media (Benj Edwards/Ars Technica)

Benj Edwards / Ars Technica:
With AI image generation tools like Stable Diffusion and DreamBooth, it’s easy to make damaging deepfakes using just a few images of a person from social media  —  AI tech makes it trivial to generate harmful fake photos from a few social media pictures.  —  If you’re one of the billions …

With AI image generation tools like Stable Diffusion and DreamBooth, it’s easy to make damaging deepfakes using just a few images of a person from social media (Benj Edwards/Ars Technica)

Benj Edwards / Ars Technica:
With AI image generation tools like Stable Diffusion and DreamBooth, it’s easy to make damaging deepfakes using just a few images of a person from social media  —  AI tech makes it trivial to generate harmful fake photos from a few social media pictures.  —  If you’re one of the billions …