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Jensen Huang Hand-Delivers Nvidia's First DGX H200 GPU To OpenAI's Sam Altman To 'Advance AI, Computing, And Humanity'

Benzinga ·  Apr 25 02:32

Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ:NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang hand-delivered the first DGX H200 GPU to OpenAI's Sam Altman and Greg Brockman, continuing the tradition of the close collaboration between the two companies.

What Happened: Huang donated the first DGX H200 GPU out in the world to OpenAI, after announcing it in March alongside the GB200 AI super chip.

Brockman, who is currently the president of OpenAI, posted a photo with Huang, Altman, and the DGX H200 GPU.

He noted that this is the first H200 GPU in the world. Combined with the fact that Huang hand-delivered it to OpenAI, this is a symbolic gesture.

Brockman noted that Huang's message while donating the H200 GPU to OpenAI was "to advance AI, computing, and humanity."

First @NVIDIA DGX H200 in the world, hand-delivered to OpenAI and dedicated by Jensen "to advance AI, computing, and humanity": pic.twitter.com/rEJu7OTNGT

— Greg Brockman (@gdb) April 24, 2024

OpenAI is a research organization that focuses on artificial intelligence. The company has been at the forefront of AI research and has been a key player in the development of AI technologies.

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Its ChatGPT launch in late 2022 kicked off a storm in the AI chatbot arena, leading to several companies unveiling their large language models and chatbots.

Why It Matters: Earlier in March, Nvidia unveiled the DGX H200 GPU alongside the GB200 AI super chip.

The H200 GPU is a successor to the widely popular H100 GPU – it offers 1.8 times the memory and 1.4 times the bandwidth that H100 did. This makes information processing much faster since it can store more data, reducing the dependency on external storage which is slower.

On the other hand, the GB200 AI superchip is 8,470 times faster than the DGX-1 supercomputer that Huang donated to OpenAI back in 2016. Huang calls it the "miracle" chip.

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Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of Benzinga Neuro and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

Photos courtesy: Shutterstock

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