Jensen Huang walked into NVIDIA GTC 2026 and announced a $1 trillion order target by 2027. That number alone reframes every conversation about AI infrastructure spending. But the video argues the real story is not that figure, and it is not DLSS 5, the AI graphics upscaling tech that landed somewhere between viral meme and genuine controversy.
The Vera Rubin platform is the centerpiece worth understanding: 35x performance over its predecessor, paired with next-generation AI chip breakthroughs and a roadmap that already names the generation after it, Feynman. NVIDIA also showed robotics on stage, full self-driving advances, an enterprise product called OpenClaw, and a move into AI for space applications. The DGX Spark announcement rounds out a dense product slate.
Read the full breakdown because the gap between the headline grab and the actual technical weight of Vera Rubin is where the real argument lives. The hosts also work through what the Grok acquisition signals and whether the trillion-dollar order claim is a forecast or a negotiating position.
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