Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is in London, standing in front of a room full of journalists, on an outing Gemini’s Nanobanana. “Who can’t like nanobananas? I mean nanobananas, how good is that? Tell me it’s not true!” he spoke to the room. No one responded. “Tell me it’s not true! Great. I’m just talking to Demis [Hassabis, CEO of DeepMind] Yesterday I said, “How about that nanobanana! How good is that?”
It seems that many people agree with him: the popularity of nanobanana AI image generators – Launched in August And allows users to accurately edit AI images while retaining the mass of faces, animals or other objects in the background – Gemini caused a wave of 300 million images in the first few days of September. Posts on x Josh Woodward, vice president of Google Labs and Google Gemini.
Huang, his company In the queue of large American technology companies To announce Tuesday’s investment in data centers, supercomputers and AI research in the UK, it’s a high investment. Before British Prime Minister Keir Starmer (who plans to wear a black leather tail) white tie campaign, he was very optimistic about the future of British AI, saying the country was “too modest” about the country’s AI advancement potential.
He cites British descent in topics such as Industrial Revolution, Steam Train, DeepMind (now owned by Google) and university researchers, and other tangent skills. He quipped, “No one is better than you.” “Your tea is good. You’re great. Come on!”
NVIDIA announces $683 million in equity Invest in NScale Data Center Builder This week, the move – investments from Openai and Microsoft have pushed the company to the UK’s AI driver. Huang estimated that NScale will generate more than $68 billion in revenue in six years. “I’ll record it and say I’m the best thing ever,” he said.
“With the deployment of AI services – I’m sure all of you are using it. I use it every day and it improves my learning, thinking. It helps me access information, and access knowledge more effectively. It helps me write, helps me think, helps me come up with ideas. So my experience with AI is probably everyone’s experience.
Billionaire in leather jacket, who Wired previously told him that he used AI agents in his personal lifeextending how he uses AI (not nanobananas) in most daily work, including his public speaking and research.
“I really like using an AI Word processor because it remembers me and knows what I’m going to talk about. I can describe the different situations I’m in, but still knows I’m Jensen, in another situation,” Huang explained. “That way, it can reshape what I’m doing and help. It’s a thoughtful partner, it’s really great, it saves me a lot of time. Frankly, I think the quality of the work is better.”
He said his favorite use “depending on what I’m doing.” “For something more technical, I would use Gemini. If I’m doing something that prefers art, I prefer Grok. If it’s very fast information access, I prefer confusion – it does a really good job of showing me research. For me, Chatgpt is available every day, and I like using Chatgpt,” Huang said.
“When I do something serious, I give all these tips and I ask them, because it’s for research, criticizing each other’s work. Then, I’ll do my best.”
Finally, all the themes brought back nanobananas. “AI should be democratized for every democrat. No one should be left behind, and for me, someone should not be forgotten about falling behind on the internet of electricity or the next technology,” he said.
“AI is our biggest opportunity to end the technology gap,” Huang said. “This technology is easy to use – don’t know how to use Nano?”