LAS VEGAS — In a packed Las Vegas arena, Nvidia founder Jensen Huang stood on stage and marveled over the crisp real-time computer graphics displayed on the screen behind him. He watched as a dark-haired woman walked through ornate gilded double doors and took in the rays of light that poured in through stained glass windows.
''The amount of geometry that you saw was absolutely insane,'' Huang told an audience of thousands at CES 2025 Monday night. ''It would have been impossible without artificial intelligence.''
The chipmaker and AI darling unveiled its GeForce RTX 50 Series desktop and laptop GPUs — powered by its new Blackwell artificial intelligence chip — kicking off a string of entertainment-related AI announcements and discussions at the trade show.
''Blackwell, the engine of AI, has arrived for PC gamers, developers and creatives,'' Huang said, adding that Blackwell ''is the most significant computer graphics innovation since we introduced programmable shading 25 years ago.'' Blackwell technology is now in full production, he said.
Semiconductor maker AMD unveiled its latest Ryzen 9 and AI series processors Monday morning, boasting unprecedented performance for gamers and content creators. The new chips help AMD to further compete with rivals like Nvidia, Intel and Qualcomm in the budding AI PC space.
''With the next generation of AI-enabled processors, we are proliferating AI to devices everywhere, and bringing the power of a workstation to thin and light laptops,'' said Jack Huynh, senior vice president and general manager of computing and graphics group at AMD.
Google, meanwhile, previewed new AI tools for Google TV that use Gemini to make ''interacting with your TV more intuitive and helpful.'' Users, the company said, will be able to have a ''natural'' conversation with their TVs to ask about things like travel and history, or ask the TV for an overview of the day's news.
Samsung also showed off its foray in AI and announced its ''Samsung Vision AI'' that includes a click to search feature allowing users to do things like identify an actor on screen, and a translation feature that provides real-time subtitles. It also integrates with the rest of the company's smart home ecosystem.