NVIDIA AI growth can continue despite supply constraints, CEO Jensen Huang said Tuesday during Computex week in Taipei, Taiwan, as demand for chips used in data centres remains high.
Huang said Nvidia had secured supply for “very robust growth” in its central processing units and graphics processing units, but added that the company still faces supply limits.
The comments came a day after Nvidia unveiled the RTX Spark PC chip, which brings artificial intelligence capabilities directly to personal computers. The chip is expected to launch in the fall.
Huang said RTX Spark is part of Nvidia’s work with Microsoft to “reinvent the PC” for the AI era.
The move puts Nvidia into closer competition with Advanced Micro Devices, Intel and Apple.
Read: Nvidia AI Laptop Chip Targets Windows PCs
NVIDIA’s graphics processing units power major AI data centres and have driven tens of billions of dollars in revenue.
The company’s market value has also made it one of the world’s most valuable companies.
Huang said Taiwan remains central to Nvidia’s supply chain. He said Nvidia plans to keep investing in Taiwan and make its supply network more resilient.