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Don't remind me again today

NVIDIA's chief just dropped an interesting take—he's genuinely supportive of the military adopting AI tech for defense purposes. The conversation got real about how quickly modern tech is pivoting toward military applications, and honestly? It feels like an inevitable trajectory at this point.



What caught my attention was how matter-of-fact he sounded about it all. No hesitation, no corporate dodging. Just straight talk about where the industry's headed. The guy and his interviewer went deep on this shift, exploring why defense AI isn't just coming—it's already here.

Think about it: the same GPU architecture powering crypto mining and LLM training is now being eyed for strategic defense systems. The tech doesn't care about its application; it just executes. Whether that's bullish or concerning depends on your perspective, but the convergence is undeniable.
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ForkMastervip
· 5h ago
Military-grade chip arbitrage is coming again, so keep a close eye on this round of fork opportunities.
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memecoin_therapyvip
· 6h ago
There’s really no way to avoid military AI—there are only so many things in the tech stack. Whether GPUs and chips are used for mining or bombing, at the end of the day, they’re just doing work. Jensen Huang’s recent remarks aren’t exactly breaking news; he just laid bare what everyone in the industry already understands but doesn’t say out loud. Wait, if the military really starts applying LLMs like that, does that mean we have to recalculate the ceiling for our own models? Forget it, there’s no stopping it anyway—what’s meant to happen will happen. It’s all about whose chips can secure a spot first. Man, the judgment that “GPU = general-purpose computing tool” is accurate, but don’t you think viewing it like that is a bit too cold-blooded? This time Jensen Huang just said it straight instead of dodging the topic—it’s actually pretty refreshing. Feels much better than those “we’re a company for peace” platitudes. The defense industry is eating so well, and there are plenty of companies selling one thing while claiming another. Nvidia being this blunt actually comes across as… well, honest?
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ForkTonguevip
· 6h ago
The outcome for military-grade chips was set long ago; Jensen Huang just pointed it out, that's all. Think about it: GPU mining, training large models, military defense... this thing really doesn't have blinders on. It was bound to happen sooner or later. Instead of pretending not to see, it's better to be upfront—this guy is at least honest. A chip is just a chip; whether it's put into a weapon is up to the politicians... actually, no, it's determined by the market. Not gonna lie, this move is pretty bold—just saying the industry's truth out loud.
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DegenWhisperervip
· 6h ago
In the military AI sector, Huang’s attitude is honestly so straightforward and refreshing—none of that usual corporate jargon, it’s really comfortable. Ngl, GPUs are basically Swiss Army knives—you can use them for mining, training models, defense systems, whatever. The architecture is just like that—whoever gets it, uses it. That transition was so fast and smooth... I can barely keep it together. Wait, the same computing infrastructure... is this another sign of a tech value surge? Never mind, maybe I’m overthinking it. --- Honestly, hearing him talk about this so bluntly does make me feel a bit emo. In the end, it seems like all technology inevitably goes down that road. --- The idea that GPUs don’t even know what they’re doing is hilarious, haha. It’s like I don’t know what I’m doing either. --- Why does the term “convergence” keep popping up more and more... Feels like everything is merging, it’s kind of creepy. --- This time Jensen Huang really didn’t bother with any fake corporate pleasantries—just flat out said it’s military first. Changed my impression of big tech execs a bit.
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GasFeeCryervip
· 6h ago
Forget it, GPU mining, AI training, military defense... To put it simply, it's just technology looking for application scenarios. Doesn't matter who uses it, it's all the same.
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BrokenRugsvip
· 6h ago
The military-industrial AI sector is bound to emerge sooner or later. Boss Huang is just voicing what everyone is thinking. After all, chips themselves are not inherently good or bad in terms of their use.
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