Artificial intelligence means everyone can now be a computer programmer as all they need to do is speak to the computer, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Monday, hailing the end of the "digital divide".
Nvidia has surged to become the world's most valuable listed
semiconductor company as a major supplier of chips and computing systems for
artificial intelligence.
The company last week forecast second-quarter revenue more
than 50 percent above Wall Street estimates and said it was boosting supply to
meet surging demand for its artificial-intelligence chips, which are used to
power ChatGPT and many similar services.
Speaking to thousands of people at the Computex forum in
Taipei, Huang, who was born in southern Taiwan before his family emigrated to
the United States when he was a child, said AI was leading a computing
revolution.
"There's no question we're in a new computing
era," he said in a speech, occasionally dropping in words of Mandarin or
Taiwanese to the delight of the crowd.
"Every single computing era you could do different
things that weren't possible before, and artificial intelligence certainly
qualifies," Huang added.
"The programming barrier is incredibly low. We have
closed the digital divide. Everyone is a programmer now - you just have to say
something to the computer," he said.
"The rate of progress, because it's so easy to use, is
the reason why it's growing so fast. This is going to touch literally every
single industry."
Nvidia's chips have helped companies such as Microsoft add
human-like chat features to search engines such as Bing.
Huang demonstrated what AI could do, including getting a
programme to write a short pop song praising Nvidia with only a few words of
instruction.
He unveiled several new applications, including a
partnership with the world's largest advertising group WPP for generative
AI-enabled content for digital advertising.
Nvidia has strained to meet demand for its AI chips, with
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who is reportedly building out an artificial-intelligence
startup, last week telling an interviewer that the graphics processing units
(GPUs) are "considerably harder to get than drugs". © Reuters