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See the Highlights From Nvidia's Epic Computex 2024 Keynote in 8 Minutes

Get a dose of tomorrow's AI initiatives, data center innovations, digital humans, robotics advances, and "Earth 2.0" (and, oh yeah, Jensen Huang's robot army) while you get coffee.

 & John Burek Executive Editor and PC Labs Director

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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(Credit: Mark Stetson)

Nvidia's Computex 2024 keynote was an epic: Just over two hours of CEO Jensen Huang holding the state solo, giving a nonstop tour de force of where his company has been and where it's going. Given Nvidia's wildly successful year in the market and the public eye, he was given a raucous reception and alternated at times between English and Chinese, tapping into the enthusiasm that, at the moment, his company is riding a wave of history.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

Indeed, that was the vibe throughout the keynote: of a company that finds itself (in part by decades of innovation, and in part by the happy accident of being optimally positioned for the very specific needs of AI) as a major player in what is emerging as "a new industrial revolution." Nvidia's hardware and software stacks touch the core of AI, of course, but also robotics and especially data science and modeling (which, in turn, touch dozens of industries in deep and world-changing ways).

The company may be best known to consumers as the engines that power PC gaming. But as Huang acknowledged at one point during the event, pointing to one of the impossibly powerful rack-mounted AI servers that graced the stage, "This is a GPU."

(Credit: Mark Stetson)

The full keynote's on YouTube if you have the time (and it's a worthy watch), but the highlights are above in under 10 minutes. Plus, scroll on down for a few of our favorite pix we shot at the event.

(Credit: Mark Stetson)
(Credit: Mark Stetson)
(Credit: Mark Stetson)
(Credit: Mark Stetson)
(Credit: Mark Stetson)

About Our Expert

John Burek

John Burek

Executive Editor and PC Labs Director

My Experience

I have been a technology journalist for almost 30 years and have covered just about every kind of computer gear—from the 386SX to 64-core processors—in my long tenure as an editor, a writer, and an advice columnist. For almost a quarter-century, I worked on the seminal, gigantic Computer Shopper magazine (and later, its digital counterpart), aka the phone book for PC buyers, and the nemesis of every postal delivery person. I was Computer Shopper's editor in chief for its final nine years, after which much of its digital content was folded into PCMag.com. I also served, briefly, as the editor in chief of the well-known hard-core tech site Tom's Hardware.

During that time, I've built and torn down enough desktop PCs to equip a city block's worth of internet cafes. Under race conditions, I've built PCs from bare-board to bootup in under 5 minutes. I never met a screwdriver I didn't like.

I was also a copy chief and a fact checker early in my career. (Editing and polishing technical content to make it palatable for consumer audiences is my forte.) I also worked as an editor of scholarly science books, and as an editor of "Dummies"-style computer guidebooks for Brady Books (now, BradyGames). I'm a lifetime New Yorker, a graduate of New York University's journalism program, and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.

The Technology I Use

I use a lot of computers on rotation in my daily work, but I rely on just a few to get things done. I split my work life mostly between a Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 (a 15-inch Ryzen model), paired with a Lenovo ThinkVision portable monitor, and a custom-built big-chassis Windows 10 desktop PC that has served me well for years now. (Specs: Liquid-cooled Intel Core i7-6950X Extreme Edition, 32GB of RAM, and a GeForce GTX 1080 card.) That's all in a giant chassis with six hard drives and SSDs packing its bays. (As I upgrade systems, I just keep moving the old warhorse drives over.) This behemoth is hooked up to a 32-inch LG monitor.

I also have a bunch of PCs around the house, all custom builds: another one attached to my main TV (for gaming and occasional forays into VR), a mini-PC on the bedroom TV (acting as a media server), and a Mini-ITX desktop in a corner of the living room...just because. I carry around an oversize OnePlus phone, but when I do long-haul travel, a vintage iPod Touch comes along, too, for old times' sake.

I wasn't always a PC guy. I cut my teeth on a cassette-drive-equipped Commodore VIC-20 in the 1980s. But I got serious with Apple desktops in the early 1990s, starting with a Macintosh SE, then a Macintosh LC, and finally one of the short-lived Umax "clone" Macs, before building my first PC and never looking back.

With all my typing and editing work over the years, I've become a huge proponent of thumb trackballs, which minimize wrist action (and my wrist pain). I have a secret cache of the long-discontinued Microsoft Trackball Optical Mouse (my personal favorite), held in an undisclosed location.

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