Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says that it is good for AI, it is a great equal for the future of AI
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang said at the London Tech Week, AI “The Great Equiser”, urged users to “ask” to unlock their ability.
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In short
- AI is “great equalizer” for programming, CEO Jensen Huang says
- “Just ask well” for the program AI, Huang says at London Tech Week
- UK AI is investing £ 1 billion
At the London Tech Week on Monday, NVDia CEO Jensen Huang shared a vision of Artificial Intelligence (AI) as a transformational force that can make technology accessible to everyone. Speaking with the UK Prime Minister Keer Stmper, Huang described AI as “great equalizer” for the future of the work, especially in programming. His main message? AI please behave, and it will unlock remarkable possibilities. Huang, whose company designs state -of -the -art AI chips, reported that the programming historically is a complex skill for those fluent in languages such as C ++ or Python. But AI is changing now.
He said, “We had to learn programming languages. We had to do architects. We had to design these computers that are very complex,” he said. “Now, suddenly, there is a new programming language. This new programming language is called ‘Manav’,” Huang told the audience. This means that anyone can now instruct the computer using everyday language.
His advice to get the best from AI is surprisingly simple: “Just ask it well.” Huang described it with an example of asking AI to write a poem about the main speech at London Tech Week. “You say: You are an incredible poet … and I would like you to write a poem to describe today’s keynote speaker,” he said. AI will easily produce a poem, and if it is not quite correct, you can politely ask to improve it. “It will stop and think about it, and it will come back and say, in fact, I can do better,” Huang said.
This communist approach to AI reflects a comprehensive change in technology. Since Openai’s chat attracted widespread attention in 2022, the convergent AI model like Google’s Gemini and Microsoft’s Copilot has made it easier for people to interact with technology in a manner-like manner. Huang’s comment aligns with this trend, suggests that AI can empower non-experts to do tasks such as coding, generating images, or even writing poetry.
The incident also highlighted the growing role of the UK in AI development. Huang praised the progress of the country, describing as a “Goldillox” moment for AI growth, according to LinkedIn News editor John Tomeres. The Prime Minister’s stormer strengthened this optimism by announcing 1 billion investment in the AI Infrastructure upgrade.
However, AI’s emergence in programming raises questions about the future of coding jobs. Tech leaders like Google’s beautiful Pichai and Microsoft’s Satya Nadella have revealed that AI already writes 30 percent of its companies’ code, above 25 percent in October 2024. Mark Zuckerberg of Meta predicted that within 12 to 18 months, AI could write almost all codes for projects such as Meta Lalma. Meanwhile, companies such as Duoolingo and Shopif are changing human roles with AI, with Shopif CEO Tobias Lutke teams, teams need to explain why AI cannot handle the tasks before hiring new employees.
Last week, the co-founder and former chief scientist of OpenAII, Ilya Sutaskewar, said that AI will soon be able to do anything that humans can do. “AI will be better and the day will come when AI will do all the things we can,” he said.
This week, CEO Sebastian Ceemiatcovski, speaking, speaking Times Tech Podcast warned that rapid growth of AI could cause recession and wide white collar job losses. “White-collar would be a implication for jobs,” and such a change “usually leads to minimal recession in the short term.” He said, “Unfortunately, I do not see how we can escape from that from a technology perspective,” he said.
Despite these trends, many technical leaders, including Huang, see AI as a tool to increase human abilities rather than replacing them. AI Company founder Darren Hardman, while echoing it at London Tech Week, said, “AI should empower people, not replace them. It is about removing digital intoxication so that we can focus on the work that really matters – the work that makes us human.” The vision of Huang of AI as a synonym suggests a future where technology increases human ability, making creativity and innovation accessible to all.