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Nvidia GTC
Nvidia GTC
from Wikipedia
Nvidia GTC
DatesMarch & November (4–5 days)
FrequencySemi-annual
VenueSan Jose Convention Center
LocationSan Jose, California, U.S.
FoundedOctober 2, 2009 (2009-10-02)
Most recentMarch 18, 2025 (2025-03-18)
Next eventNot Known
Attendance25,000 (est.)[1]
Organized byNvidia
Websitewww.nvidia.com/gtc/

Nvidia GTC (GPU Technology Conference) is a global artificial intelligence (AI) conference for developers that brings together developers, engineers, researchers, inventors, and IT professionals.[2] Topics focus on AI, computer graphics, data science, machine learning and autonomous machines. Each conference begins with a keynote from Nvidia CEO and founder Jensen Huang, followed by a variety of sessions and talks with experts from around the world.

It originated in 2009 in San Jose, California, with an initial focus on the potential for solving computing challenges through GPUs.[3] In recent years, the conference focus has shifted to various applications of artificial intelligence and deep learning, including: self-driving cars, healthcare, high performance computing, professional visualization, and Nvidia Deep Learning Institute (DLI) training.[4]

History

[edit]

The first GTC was held from September 30 to October 2, 2009 at the Fairmont San Jose hotel and attracted roughly 1,500 attendees.[5][6] The first GTC was so wildly popular that it ended up hosting "several hundred more people" than expected, forcing Nvidia to "shut down registration" at two weeks before the conference.[5] The New York Times later described the atmosphere at the first GTC as akin to a science fair, where academics presented their work on posters.[7]

Since GTC 2009, Nvidia has used the much larger San Jose Convention Center as GTC's primary venue. Along with Nvidia, GTC's size and prominence greatly increased during the AI boom.

According to Nvidia, Huang starts to plan his keynote address about two months before each GTC, to identify what announcements he will make and what things he will present or demonstrate on the stage.[7] But Huang "speaks extemporaneously" while on stage, does not use a script, and does not rehearse in advance.[7]

GTC 2018 attracted over 8,400 attendees. Due to the COVID pandemic of 2020, GTC 2020 was converted to a digital event and drew roughly 59,000 registrants. The 2021 GTC keynote, which was streamed on YouTube on April 12, included a portion that was made with CGI using the Nvidia Omniverse real-time rendering platform. Due to the photorealism of the event, including a model of CEO Jensen Huang, news outlets reported not being able to discern that a portion of the keynote was CGI until later revealed in a blog post on August 11.[8]

GTC 2025 drew about 25,000 attendees to San Jose.[7] To accommodate demand, Huang delivered his keynote address down the street at a hockey arena, SAP Center, which can hold about 17,000 people.[9] By then, GTC and its host company had shifted focus so sharply from graphics to artificial intelligence that Huang himself called GTC the "Super Bowl of A.I."[10] Nvidia wrapped Downtown San Jose in its "neon green and black colors".[7] Demand for San Jose hotel rooms drove prices as high as $2,500 per night.[10] One sign that GTC had evolved from a programmer-oriented developer conference into an executive-oriented business conference for networking and negotiating AI deals was that it took 35 minutes just to get into a nearby building set aside for business meetings.[9] There were long lines everywhere inside the San Jose Convention Center, meaning that GTC may be getting too big for the center.[9] In a joint promotion with Nvidia, Denny's parked its Mobile Diner outside the SAP Center before Huang's keynote address on March 18 and gave out free food samples to celebrate the fact that Nvidia was founded in a booth in a Denny's diner.[9][11] On March 18, Nvidia also held a night market inspired by Huang's well-known affection for Taiwanese night markets.[9] Thus, on March 18, hard-core attendees had to survive a grueling 12-hour schedule of events to get the full GTC experience.[9]

Event Almanac
Year Dates Location Notable speakers Announcements
2009 Sep 30–Oct 2 San Jose, CA Jensen Huang; Richard Kerris; Jon Peddie; Hanspeter Pfister, Harvard University Fermi microarchitecture;[12][13] Maybe first keynote ever in 3D; double precision n body simulation demo
2010 Sep 20–23 San Jose Convention Center, San Jose, CA Jensen Huang; Sebastian Thrun, robotics at Stanford and engineer at Google; Klaus Schulten, computational biologist, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign DX11 Tessellation; Iray on 3DSMax; CUDA x86; Matlab CUDA Accelerated Parallel Computing Toolbox; CUDA roadmap revealed through Maxwell; Quadro graphics cards for video gaming [14]
2011 Dec 14–15 China[15] Jensen Huang CUDA[16][17]
2012 May 14–17 San Jose Jensen Huang; Iain Couzins (Human Brains and Crowd Behavior), and Part Time Scientists Robert Boehme and Wes Faler (Space) Kepler microarchitecture;[18] GeForce Grid (GeForce Now)[19]
2013 Mar 18–21 San Jose Jensen Huang; Erez Lieberman Aiden (genomics pioneer), Ralph V. Gilles (President and CEO of SRT Brand at Chrysler) Face Works for facial animation[20]
2014 Mar 25 San Jose Jensen Huang; Dirk Van Gelder; Danny Nahmias, Adam Gazzaley; Oculus CEO Brandon (announced Facebook was acquiring) NVLink;[21] Pascal microarchitecture;[22] Tegra mobile;[23] Audi drives itself onto stage
2015 Mar 17–20 San Jose Jensen Huang; Elon Musk; Jeff Dean; Andrew Ng; Andrej Karpathy (director of AI/Computer Vision at Tesla) Nvidia Drive; Titan X;[24] Voice recognition[25]
2016 Apr 4–8; Sep 28–29 San Jose; Amsterdam Jensen Huang Pascal microarchitecture new version;[26] DGX-1; Nvidia Drive PX2; iRay; DGX-2
2017 May 8–11 San Jose; Europe; Israel; Japan Jensen Huang Volta Supercomputer;[27] ISAAC Robot Simulator[28]
2018 Mar 26–29 San Jose; Europe; Israel; Japan Jensen Huang Clara for healthcare and biomedical research;[29] ARM partnership announce for IoT;[30] RAPIDS Demo[31]
2019 Mar 17–21 San Jose; Europe; Israel; Japan Jensen Huang GauGAN for animation;[32] Orin auto AI processor;[33] Self-driving car partnership with Toyota;[34] CUDA-X AI acceleration libraries adopted by PayPal, SAS, Walmart and Microsoft[35]
2020 Oct 5–9 Digital[36] Jensen Huang AI Supercomputer for Biomedical Research;[37] Ampere GPUs for visual computing;[38] A100;[39] Artificial Intelligence for Edge and Cloud;[40] ISAAC Demo [41]
2021 Apr 12–16 Digital Jensen Huang; Geoffrey Hinton; Yann LeCun; Yoshua Bengio[42] Grace;[43][44] BMW Virtual Factory;[45] Omniverse Enterprise;[46] SDK for quantum simulations;[47] DGX SuperPOD;[48] Nvidia BlueField 3 DPU[49]
2022 Mar 21–24 Digital Jensen Huang; Andrew Ng, Dale Durran, Doruk Sonmez Hopper architecture,[50] H100 GPU,[51] Jetson AGX Orin[52]
2022 Sep 19–22 Digital Jensen Huang TBA
2023 Mar 20–23 Digital Jensen Huang TBA
2024 Mar 18–21 San Jose Jensen Huang Blackwell architecture[53]
2025[54] Mar 17–21 San Jose Jensen Huang NVIDIA Isaac GR00T N1[55]

NVIDIA / General Motors Partnership[56]

2025 May 21-22 Taipei, Taiwan Jensen Huang NVIDIA NVLink Fusion[57]

NVIDIA RTS PRO Servers[58]

Foxconn AI Factory in Partnership with NVIDIA and Taiwan[59]

2025 June 21-22 Paris, France Jensen Huang TBA[60]
2025 October 27-29 Washington D.C. Jensen Huang TBD - See [61]
2026 March 16-19 San Jose Jensen Huang TBA (Date announced at GTC October 2025 Keynote [62])

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
NVIDIA GTC, formally known as the GPU Technology Conference, is the world's premier developer conference centered on (AI), accelerated , and related technologies, where developers, researchers, data scientists, IT professionals, leaders, and students convene to explore breakthroughs, network, and innovate. Founded in 2009 by to advance through massively parallel processing with GPUs, the event originated as a weeklong gathering in , and has evolved into a global series of conferences emphasizing AI applications across industries such as , healthcare, automotive, and enterprise. The flagship GTC event occurs annually in March at the San Jose McEnery , drawing over 25,000 attendees in recent years, including approximately 25,000 at GTC 2025 (March 2025), for a multi-day program that includes keynote addresses—often led by CEO —technical sessions, hands-on workshops, exhibitions of cutting-edge hardware and software, and announcements of new products like GPUs, AI platforms, and developer tools. In addition to the main San Jose conference, hosts regional GTC editions multiple times a year in locations such as Washington, D.C., , and , adapting content to local ecosystems while maintaining a focus on global AI advancements and practical implementations. GTC's significance lies in its role as a catalyst for the AI revolution, featuring live demonstrations, technical sessions, and collaborations that have historically unveiled transformative technologies, including early CUDA programming models and recent innovations in generative AI, agentic systems, and physical AI for robotics. The conference provides free online access to session recordings and keynotes post-event, ensuring broad dissemination of insights to a worldwide audience and reinforcing NVIDIA's position as a leader in AI infrastructure.

Overview

Definition and Purpose

The GPU Technology Conference (GTC), founded by in 2009, serves as a premier platform for developers, researchers, and industry leaders to explore and advance innovations in (GPU) technologies. Initially established to promote GPU-accelerated computing beyond traditional graphics rendering, GTC has grown into a global forum emphasizing parallel processing for high-performance applications. The primary purpose of GTC is to showcase cutting-edge advancements in GPU-accelerated computing, facilitate collaboration among experts, and accelerate innovation across domains such as (AI), graphics, and . Attendees engage with real-world implementations of accelerated computing to build skills, network with peers, and gain insights from industry pioneers, ultimately driving the adoption of NVIDIA's technologies in diverse sectors. This focus fosters a where professionals from technology companies, academia, and enterprises converge to address complex computational challenges. Over the years, GTC has evolved from a graphics-centric event to the leading conference on AI and accelerated computing, often dubbed the "Super Bowl of AI" due to its central role in unveiling transformative technologies. It features an annual flagship event held in March in San Jose, California, with additional regional editions throughout the year in locations such as Washington, D.C., Paris, Taipei, and Mumbai to accommodate global participation. A highlight is the keynote address by NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, which sets the tone for emerging trends in computing.

Format and Attendance

NVIDIA GTC is structured as a multi-day conference, typically lasting 4 to 5 days, encompassing keynotes, technical sessions, hands-on workshops, exhibitions, and dedicated networking events designed to foster collaboration among participants. The schedule for the flagship event in 2025, for instance, ran from March 17 to 21, including workshops and training. This format allows attendees to engage with cutting-edge demonstrations and interactive opportunities throughout the duration. The primary venue for the in-person March conference is the San Jose McEnery Convention Center in , with keynotes often held at the nearby to accommodate larger crowds; virtual and hybrid participation options were introduced following the 2020 event to broaden global access. Attendance has expanded dramatically over the years, starting with around 1,500 participants in 2009 and reaching approximately 25,000 in-person attendees plus 300,000 virtual participants by 2025, drawing a diverse audience of developers, executives, researchers, and students from various sectors. Registration is free for virtual access and many in-person sessions, enabling wider participation, while expo halls showcase innovations from over 300 partners and exhibitors. The conference adopted a hybrid model post-2020, when the prompted a full shift to digital delivery, attracting about 59,000 registrants worldwide and setting the stage for ongoing virtual components. In 2025, distinctive features enhanced the attendee experience, including a Taiwanese-inspired for evening networking and a promotional collaboration with , which introduced a limited-time "NVIDIA Breakfast Bytes" menu item tied to 's origins.

History

Founding and Early Years

The GPU Technology Conference (GTC), organized by NVIDIA, was launched as the inaugural event from September 30 to October 2, 2009, at the Fairmont San Jose hotel in California, attracting approximately 1,500 attendees focused on advancing GPU-based computing. The conference originated to showcase NVIDIA's innovations in graphics processing units (GPUs) and their applications in high-performance computing (HPC), emphasizing the shift toward parallel processing paradigms enabled by GPU architectures. A key highlight was the unveiling of the Fermi microarchitecture during the opening keynote, which introduced enhanced capabilities for general-purpose computing on GPUs (GPGPU), including support for error-correcting code (ECC) memory and improved double-precision performance for scientific simulations. In its early years, GTC established an annual cadence starting with the 2010 edition, which saw attendance exceed 2,000 participants—a growth of more than 50% from the previous year—reflecting rising interest in GPU acceleration for diverse workloads. The event gradually expanded to incorporate developer training sessions and workshops centered on the programming ecosystem, providing hands-on education for engineers to leverage GPUs for parallel algorithm development and optimization. Starting with the 2010 edition, the conference was held at the larger San Jose McEnery Convention Center to accommodate increasing scale and broader participation from academia, industry, and startups exploring GPU applications beyond traditional graphics. From 2012 to 2015, GTC emphasized advancements in , with sessions and keynotes highlighting GPU-accelerated simulations in fields like climate modeling and , alongside nascent explorations of techniques such as neural networks trained via GPU parallelism. These years solidified GTC's role as a hub for fostering the CUDA developer community and demonstrating how GPUs could transform compute-intensive tasks, setting the stage for broader adoption in emerging domains.

Expansion and Modern Developments

Following its early years focused primarily on graphics and GPU advancements, Nvidia's GPU Technology Conference (GTC) entered a significant growth phase from 2016 onward, driven by the rising interest in (AI) and . Attendance doubled from approximately 5,500 participants in 2016 to around 9,000 by 2019, reflecting the integration of dedicated tracks that highlighted GPU-accelerated applications in areas such as image processing, , and neural networks. The profoundly impacted GTC's format, shifting the 2020 edition to a fully that attracted roughly 59,000 registrants worldwide, far surpassing prior in-person figures and underscoring the conference's expanding global appeal amid AI's surge. Subsequent events from 2021 to 2023 remained virtual, allowing broader accessibility while maintaining keynotes, sessions, and training through online platforms. By 2024, GTC returned to a hybrid in-person model for the first time since 2019, drawing over 12,000 in-person attendees to San Jose and over 288,000 virtually, for a combined total exceeding 300,000 participants. In the modern era, GTC has achieved record in-person crowds, with the 2025 spring event in San Jose from March 17-21 hosting about 25,000 in-person attendees at the San Jose McEnery (with the at the ), alongside 300,000 virtual participants. This resurgence coincided with the addition of fall editions, such as GTC , held October 27-29, 2025, at the , targeting policymakers and industry leaders in AI infrastructure. The 2025 program expanded AI-focused elements, including the inaugural Quantum Day on March 20 featuring panels with pioneers and an AI art gallery showcasing generative works by artists and designers. Pilot non-U.S. events further globalized the conference, with GTC integrated into in June 2025 and GTC at VivaTech in the same month, emphasizing regional AI applications in healthcare and sovereign computing. This evolution mirrors Nvidia's broader business transformation, pivoting from graphics-centric origins to AI dominance, where and accelerated now form the core of GTC's agenda, attracting developers, researchers, and enterprises building AI factories and agentic systems.

Conference Structure

Keynotes and Main Events

The flagship event of NVIDIA GTC is the annual keynote address delivered by NVIDIA founder and CEO , which typically lasts over two hours and unveils the company's strategic vision for AI and accelerated , accompanied by live demonstrations of . These keynotes serve as the conference's opening highlight, setting an inspirational tone for the entire event by blending high-level strategy with practical showcases of NVIDIA's innovations. Held at major venues such as the in San Jose, the is live-streamed worldwide to enable broad , complementing in-person attendance that reached 25,000 for the 2025 edition. The 2025 , for instance, focused on advancements in AI infrastructure and , drawing thousands to the venue while millions viewed online. Keynotes routinely feature live demos, such as real-time AI rendering and applications, to vividly demonstrate platform capabilities and engage the audience. Following the main presentation, interactive formats like Q&A sessions or often extend discussions, providing deeper insights into the topics raised. Complementing the keynote, GTC's main events include opening ceremonies to kick off proceedings, closing plenary sessions to recap highlights, and targeted gatherings such as developer forums and industry panels that promote . These panels frequently incorporate guest speakers from key partners, including AWS and , to explore ecosystem integrations and future directions. Overall, these core elements anchor the conference, prioritizing visionary content that influences attendee agendas and underscores GTC's role as a premier forum for AI advancements.

Sessions and Exhibitions

The Sessions and Exhibitions at NVIDIA GTC provide interactive and hands-on opportunities for attendees to engage with advanced technologies, complementing the inspirational keynotes through practical learning and demonstrations. These components include over 1,000 technical sessions, such as talks, tutorials, and hands-on labs, organized across various tracks with durations ranging from 30 minutes to full-day formats. Workshops form a core part of the educational offerings, delivering in-depth training on NVIDIA's key tools and platforms, including for GPU programming, Omniverse for 3D simulation and collaboration, and DGX systems for AI infrastructure. These sessions often require pre-registration and feature instructor-led instruction to help participants build practical skills in accelerated computing and AI development. The exhibitions take place in a dedicated expo hall, featuring nearly 400 booths from partners such as AWS, , and , where attendees can explore live demos of AI hardware, software integrations, and industry applications like generative AI in healthcare and . In 2025, GTC highlighted specialized sessions on edge AI and within the broader session catalog, enabling explorations of real-time AI processing in devices and autonomous systems. Networking , including receptions, foster connections among developers, engineers, and industry leaders, while virtual access through on-demand videos ensures broader participation post-event. To enhance participant engagement, GTC incorporates interactive elements like live polls during sessions, opportunities to earn NVIDIA technical certifications through training labs, and fast-paced , such as the two-hour "World's Shortest Hackathon" limited to 100 participants. These activities are designed to support skill-building for developers and engineers, emphasizing hands-on application of AI and accelerated computing concepts.

Core Topics

Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning

NVIDIA GTC has established itself as a premier venue for exploring advancements in and , with sessions emphasizing neural networks, generative AI, and large language models (LLMs). These discussions highlight the critical role of GPU acceleration in enabling efficient training and inference for complex models, allowing developers to scale AI workloads across diverse applications. NVIDIA plays a central role in AI development through frameworks such as TensorRT, which optimizes inference for high-performance deployment, and NeMo, a modular suite for building, customizing, and deploying generative AI models including LLMs. GTC sessions often address ethical AI considerations, such as safer licensing models for open-source foundation models, alongside strategies for scalability in large-scale centers to handle the growing demands of agentic AI systems. At GTC 2025, the agenda featured over 1,000 sessions, with a significant portion dedicated to AI and topics, underscoring its dominance in the conference program. Key sessions focused on AI applications in healthcare, including through models like Evo 2, the world's largest foundation model with 9 trillion , and via the Isaac platform, which advances humanoid robots with foundation models like GR00T N1 and simulation tools like . Practical applications showcased at GTC span autonomous vehicles, where partnerships like that with integrate AI for software-defined vehicles and manufacturing; through LLM optimizations; and climate modeling using platforms like NVIDIA Earth-2 for urban mitigation and photovoltaic predictions. Case studies from partners, such as Johnson & Johnson's collaboration with to scale AI for surgical applications, illustrate real-world impacts in medtech. The conference's treatment of AI has evolved significantly since its early years, shifting from foundational discussions in the —driven by the discovery of GPUs for —to a 2025 emphasis on foundation models, agentic systems, and multimodal AI that integrate reasoning, planning, and action.

Graphics and Accelerated Computing

NVIDIA GTC has long emphasized advancements in graphics technologies, building on the company's foundational role in GPU development for visual computing. Sessions at the conference frequently explore ray tracing and real-time rendering techniques, which enable photorealistic visuals in applications ranging from gaming to virtual production. For instance, presentations have covered best practices for implementing RTX real-time ray tracing, highlighting optimizations for performance in interactive environments. The Omniverse platform, NVIDIA's collaborative 3D simulation and design environment, features prominently in GTC discussions, with sessions demonstrating its use for building virtual worlds through USD-based workflows and real-time collaboration. These graphics-focused topics underscore GTC's role in bridging creative industries with computational power, as seen in applications for film and XR experiences where ray-traced lighting and shadows enhance immersion. In parallel, GTC dedicates significant coverage to accelerated computing, leveraging GPUs for (HPC), data analytics, and scientific simulations. Core concepts like parallel processing are dissected through sessions on CUDA programming, NVIDIA's proprietary platform that allows developers to harness GPU parallelism for complex computations beyond graphics. This extends to HPC workflows, where GPUs accelerate simulations in fields such as modeling via the Earth-2 platform, which uses AI-driven digital twins for kilometer-scale weather predictions. Data analytics sessions highlight GPU-accelerated tools for processing vast datasets, emphasizing scalability in enterprise environments. Specific GTC events further integrate emerging paradigms, including sessions on for distributed GPU acceleration in IoT and automotive applications, and quantum integration showcased at the 2025 Quantum Day, where experts discussed hybrid classical-quantum workflows using CUDA-Q. Applications span gaming for real-time physics simulations, film production via Omniverse pipelines, and earth sciences through Earth-2's high-resolution modeling. Tools and ecosystems receive deep dives, such as cuDNN for accelerating operations in computational pipelines, and the DGX systems for enterprise-scale HPC deployments. GTC's focus on and accelerated traces its roots to NVIDIA's heritage in visual processing cards, evolving to blend these with AI for hybrid workflows in multimodal simulations, such as physically accurate 3D environments informed by computational models. This evolution reflects the conference's commitment to unifying heritage with broader GPU-accelerated paradigms.

Notable Announcements

Hardware Innovations

NVIDIA's GPU Technology Conference (GTC) has served as a primary venue for unveiling groundbreaking GPU architectures, marking pivotal advancements in accelerated computing since its early years. The progression began with the Fermi architecture in 2009, which introduced the first complete GPU computing system with support for error-correcting code (ECC) memory, unified virtual addressing, and concurrent kernel execution, featuring 3 billion transistors and 512 CUDA cores for enhanced precision in scientific simulations. This laid the foundation for GPUs as supercomputing engines, emphasizing reliability and programmability for high-performance computing (HPC) workloads. Subsequent launches built on this momentum, with the Kepler architecture revealed at GTC 2012, delivering up to three times the over Fermi through its Streaming Multiprocessor eXtreme (SMX) units and a 28 nm process node, as demonstrated in the GeForce GTX 680 and Tesla K20 GPUs. By GTC 2016, the Pascal architecture debuted with the Tesla P100 accelerator, incorporating high-bandwidth memory (HBM2) at 720 GB/s and interconnects for 160 GB/s bidirectional bandwidth, packing 15.3 billion transistors and 10.6 teraFLOPS of single-precision performance to accelerate training. The Hopper architecture followed at GTC 2022, introducing the H100 Tensor Core GPU with 80 billion transistors, a Engine for up to six times faster , and 3 TB/s HBM3 , enabling 32 petaFLOPS of FP8 AI performance in DGX H100 systems. The Blackwell architecture, initially announced at GTC 2024, advanced this lineage with 208 billion transistors per GPU and support for trillion-parameter large language models, offering up to 25 times lower cost and energy consumption for inference compared to prior generations through its dual-die design and custom 4NP process. At GTC 2025, NVIDIA unveiled the Blackwell Ultra platform, an enhanced iteration optimized for sovereign AI initiatives, featuring increased memory capacity and 1.5 times more AI compute FLOPS to support national-scale data centers like the UK's Isambard-AI supercomputer, which leverages similar Grace Hopper systems for 21 exaFLOPS of AI performance. This release, slated for the second half of 2025, includes next-generation AI chips such as the GB300 NVL72 rack-scale system with 72 Blackwell Ultra GPUs and 36 Grace CPUs, delivering over 130 TB/s of NVLink bandwidth for exascale AI factories. At the same event, previewed the architecture, the next evolution after Blackwell, scheduled for 2026 and paired with the Vera CPU on TSMC's . The platform aims to deliver 15 exaFLOPS of AI performance in systems like the Rubin NVL576, featuring 576 GPUs, 12,672 Vera CPU cores, and 1,500 PB/s of bandwidth, further advancing multi-trillion-parameter model training and physical AI simulations. Complementing these GPU launches, GTC has spotlighted integrated systems like the DGX supercomputers, starting with the DGX-1 in 2016 powered by eight Pascal P100 GPUs for $129,000, evolving to the DGX H100 in 2022 with Hopper for massive AI training. Grace CPU-GPU combinations, first announced at GTC 2021, pair Arm-based Grace CPUs with Hopper GPUs in the Grace Hopper Superchip for 10 times the performance of contemporary servers, enhancing efficiency. At GTC 2025, new DGX Spark and DGX Station personal AI supercomputers were introduced on the Grace Blackwell platform. The DGX Spark offers 1 petaFLOPS of AI performance and 128 GB of coherent memory, while the DGX Station provides 20 petaFLOPS of AI performance and 784 GB of coherent memory, enabling edge AI prototyping. These hardware innovations emphasize energy efficiency and scalability, with Kepler's design yielding 28% lower power draw for comparable tasks and Blackwell enabling through scaling to 256 GPUs at 900 GB/s per GPU. Demos at GTC, such as Project GR00T's humanoid robotics showcases using Isaac GR00T N1 on DGX Spark hardware, illustrate real-world applications, achieving 40% performance gains in task learning via generation on these platforms. Overall, GTC hardware reveals have driven industry adoption by providing GPUs with metrics like Hopper's 30 times throughput in AI , powering deployments in providers and accelerating transitions to AI-optimized centers. Software optimizations, such as enhancements, briefly complement these chips to maximize AI workload efficiency.

Software and Partnership Updates

At NVIDIA GTC 2025, significant advancements in software were announced to bolster AI development and deployment. The company unveiled updates to CUDA, including the open-sourcing of the cuOpt decision optimization platform to enable broader access to GPU-accelerated routing and logistics algorithms. NVIDIA AI Enterprise was expanded with new tools such as AgentIQ for intelligent agent orchestration and the MONAI multimodal framework tailored for healthcare imaging and diagnostics. The NeMo framework saw the launch of the Llama Nemotron family of open reasoning AI models, designed to facilitate the creation of agentic AI systems capable of complex decision-making and interaction. Additionally, NIM microservices were enhanced in 2025 with expansions for generative AI, including integrations for inference optimization and AI reasoning, now supporting deployments on new hardware like the GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip via DGX Spark systems. Key platforms received updates to foster collaboration and specialized applications. Omniverse was augmented with the new toolset for simulating AI factories and industrial processes, including lunar exploration scenarios, enabling real-time visualizations. platform advancements included the release of GR00T N1, the world's first open for robotics, alongside the Newton physics engine co-developed with for accurate simulation of physical interactions. These platforms also integrated with open-source tools, such as and , to streamline developer workflows for and 3D collaboration. Partnerships underscored NVIDIA's ecosystem expansion, with collaborations emphasizing cloud integration and industry-specific AI. NVIDIA deepened ties with AWS to deliver AI Enterprise certifications in the AWS Marketplace, supporting hybrid compute environments for government and enterprise users via Run:ai on Amazon EKS. Google Cloud partnered on Omniverse expansions and AI infrastructure investments, including the deployment of NVIDIA Vera Rubin systems for scalable AI training. announced an extended collaboration for AI-driven vehicle experiences and manufacturing, incorporating Omniverse for virtual factory simulations. The NVIDIA-ARM joint efforts focused on edge AI optimizations, leveraging Arm's in new developer kits for low-latency inference. Specific 2025 announcements highlighted applications in climate and healthcare. Earth-2 platform updates introduced AI-driven tools like the cBottle for high-resolution simulations, demonstrated in Omniverse for photovoltaic power forecasting and disaster preparedness. In MedTech, Johnson & Johnson partnered with to advance the MONARCH robotic platform using for Healthcare simulations, accelerating development of AI-assisted procedures set for 2026 launch. A strong emphasis was placed on sovereign AI clouds, with the UK's Isambard-AI achieving 21 exaflops using 5,448 GH200 Superchips for national AI sovereignty, alongside U.S. initiatives like CoreWeave Federal's FedRAMP-compliant infrastructure. Ecosystem growth was driven by enhanced developer tools, including API updates for seamless hardware integration and expanded certifications for AI Enterprise across cloud providers. These efforts, such as Omniverse DSX for digital twins with partners like , aim to support gigawatt-scale AI deployments while promoting open-source contributions.

Global and Specialized Editions

Regional Conferences

NVIDIA GTC extends its reach through regional editions tailored to local industries and priorities, with GTC Americas serving as the flagship U.S. event held annually in March at the San Jose McEnery Convention Center. This edition features comprehensive programming on AI, accelerated computing, and , drawing developers, researchers, and industry leaders for keynotes, sessions, and exhibitions. In 2025, GTC Americas emphasized advancements in GPU architectures and AI infrastructure, aligning with North American innovation hubs. Complementing the main event, GTC Washington, D.C., held October 27–29, 2025, at the , adopts a policy-oriented focus, attracting government officials, federal agencies, and policymakers. Sessions addressed responsible AI deployment, , and applications, including partnerships for AI supercomputers with the U.S. Department of Energy. With over 2,000 attendees, the event highlighted secure AI factories and quantum-HPC integrations tailored to needs. Internationally, GTC Taipei, occurring May 21–22, 2025, in conjunction with , centers on Asia's ecosystem and hardware supply chain dynamics. Hosted at the Grand Hilai Hotel in , it convened thousands of participants from Taiwan's key manufacturers like and to discuss AI server production and advanced innovations. The agenda prioritized regional manufacturing strengths, including collaborations for AI infrastructure in the . GTC Paris, taking place June 11–12, 2025, at VivaTech in , underscores Europe's emphasis on AI sovereignty and regulatory frameworks, such as the EU AI Act. Attracting thousands of visitors, the event featured sessions on , ethical AI, and localized model development to comply with regional standards. A key highlight was the focus on technologies for industrial applications, enabling simulations aligned with European sustainability goals. These regional conferences maintain core elements like keynote addresses from executives but adapt content to address specific challenges, such as Asia's role in global chip fabrication or Europe's protection priorities. Typically hosting 5,000 to 10,000 attendees—smaller than the main event's scale—they foster targeted networking and innovation. Virtual access to sessions and on-demand content from all editions ensures broader global participation. NVIDIA's GTC has profoundly shaped the AI industry's roadmap by serving as a premier platform for unveiling technological advancements that influence global computing strategies. Announcements at the conference, such as hardware and software innovations, frequently impact financial markets; for instance, following the October 2025 GTC in Washington, D.C., NVIDIA's stock rose more than 3%, contributing to the company's valuation approaching $5 trillion. The event fosters collaboration among industry leaders, driving adoption of GPU-accelerated computing in sectors like healthcare and manufacturing, where over 700 companies from more than 40 countries engaged in AI applications during GTC 2025. Attendance at GTC has exhibited remarkable growth, reflecting the expanding AI ecosystem. The inaugural event in 2009 drew 1,500 participants, surging over 50% by 2010 and reaching approximately 2,000 in 2012 before climbing to 8,500 in 2018. By 2025, in-person attendance hit a record 25,000 in San Jose, complemented by 300,000 virtual participants, more than doubling the prior year's physical turnout. Attendees primarily comprise developers and technical practitioners, alongside executives, researchers, and innovators from over 55 countries, underscoring the conference's role in bridging technical and strategic communities. Beyond direct participation, GTC catalyzes broader innovation by spurring startups through programs like NVIDIA Inception, which provides resources and networking to early-stage AI ventures, and by advancing academic research via presentations on cutting-edge topics like digital twins and AI simulations. The 2025 editions featured policy discussions on AI ethics, safety, and U.S. competitiveness, including sessions on and trustworthy AI deployment, highlighting the event's influence on societal and geopolitical dimensions of . Economically, GTC generates significant local impact, with the 2025 San Jose event estimated to contribute over $15 million through increased hotel, restaurant, and visitor activity, while its media prominence—often dubbed the " of AI"—amplifies global reach. Post-event resources, such as on-demand session archives, extend accessibility to millions, sustaining momentum in AI development. Looking ahead, GTC's trajectory points to continued expansion driven by accelerating AI adoption across industries, with the 2026 edition already slated for San Jose and anticipated to build on recent records amid emerging applications in and climate modeling. Regional editions further contribute to global participation totals, enhancing the conference's worldwide footprint.

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