What’s Nvidia’s Rubin platform, and why it matters for AI
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Gamers should check out Nvidia's stream tonight for consumer-focused news, but don't expect new graphics cards. Jensen Huang's earlier speech at CES this afternoon prioritized AI.
Nvidia's biggest gaming reveal at CES 2026 was DLSS 4.5, an update for RTX GPUs that can boost frames rendered by six times via multi-frame generation and sharpen images with an upgraded Transformer AI model.
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NVIDIA is reportedly bringing back 2021's RTX 3060 GPU because AI is eating all of the newer cards
A reputable leaker has indicated that NVIDIA plans on bringing the RTX 3060 back to market, according to reports by Kotaku and WFCCTech. It first released the GPU at the beginning of 2021. The leaker Hongxing2020 indicates that NVIDIA will resume production of the 3060 sometime in the next few months.
Why Nvidia’s decision to call its next-generation platform “Rubin” says more about its ambitions than any benchmark slide.
In a Q&A session for media and analysts, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang sketched a vision of the future of video games—and it leans heavily on AI.
Colette Kress said demand for chips keeps rising and that she is confident the company’s suppliers have enough capacity to keep up.
Another factor for 2026 is the launch of Nvidia's next-generation architecture. The current Blackwell architecture provides impressive results, but its successor, Rubin, will be even more impressive. This upgrade will drive further costs associated with switching to 800-volt power.
Nvidia’s $20 billion Groq deal signals that AI inference—not training—will be the big focus going forward, lifting a crop of chip and software startups while reigniting debate over how long Nvidia's d
AMD CEO Lisa Su delivered a CES keynote that highlighted cost benefits, memory improvements, a shift toward real-world AI — and an insatiable demand for compute power.