During NVIDIA’s GTC 2026 keynote, CEO Jensen Huang gave attendees a sneak-peek at DLSS 5 leveraging neural rendering technology, with an array of brief clips of Resident Evil Requiem, Hogwarts Legacy, Starfield and EA Sports’ FC ’26. The newest game in that group is Resident Evil Requiem, and its already leading-edge, path-traced graphics
NVIDIA is officially announcing its new Vera Rubin platform at GTC today, positioning the release as the next frontier for “agentic AI”. The sprawling announcements (NVIDIA put out a fully twenty press releases, in addition to multiple blogs) include seven new chips that are apparently in full production, aimed at scaling massive, gigawatt-scale
Two of Apple’s most important initiatives, a complete overhaul of its operating systems’ user interface design, and its efforts to become a significant player in the AI space, haven’t been home runs. Siri isn’t even close to being what the company promised at WWDC 2024, and users haven’t been particularly taken with the Liquid Glass UI overhaul.
There aren’t a whole lot of major headlines coming out of BitCraft recently, but that’s more because the crafting-centered sandbox is continuing to truck along and...
At GTC 2026, Nvidia revealed the Groq 3 accelerator and Groq LPX rack as part of the Vera Rubin platform. These SRAM-packed, inference-focused chips deliver large amounts of memory bandwidth to help Rubin deliver low-latency interactions with AI models spanning trillions of parameters and million-token contexts.
Nvidia announced more details about its new 88-core Vera data center CPUs, claiming impressive 50% performance gains over standard CPUs, fueled by a 1.5X increase in IPC from its Olympus cores. The firm also unveiled its new Vera CPU Rack architecture, which brings 256 liquid-cooled CPUs into one rack for CPU-centric workloads.