Not That Keynote—Jensen Style

Key Takeaways

  • At Nvidia’s GTC 2025, CEO Jensen Huang unveiled the Blackwell Ultra GPU, 40x more powerful than its predecessor, signaling a leap in AI compute capabilities and rendering last-gen hardware nearly obsolete.
  • With AI data centers projected to surpass $1 trillion in buildout costs annually by 2028, Nvidia’s CUDA ecosystem is cementing its dominance by powering everything from inference computing to quantum simulation and autonomous driving.
  • Nvidia isn’t just advancing artificial intelligence; it’s redefining it with “Physical AI,” a bold new frontier where humanoid robots and AI-driven systems interact with the real world, making science fiction increasingly real.

On March 18, 2025, Jensen Huang stepped onto the stage at Nvidia's GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose with the presence of a man who knows he's about to redefine the trajectory of an industry—again. His message was clear: AI has hit an inflection point, and if you're not paying attention, you're already behind.

Some keynote speeches deliver incremental updates, a fresh coat of paint on last year's ideas. This was not that kind of keynote.

This was a declaration that the future of computing—AI, data centers, robotics, autonomous systems—is accelerating at a pace that's borderline uncomfortable. And Nvidia, with its new Blackwell Ultra GPUs and Rubin chip architecture, is the engine at the heart of this transformation.

Blackwell Ultra: More Power, Less Patience

We are trained to expect gradual improvements in computing power—a bit more performance, a bit less power draw, some new buzzwords about efficiency. But every once in a while, a breakthrough happens that obliterates expectations.

Enter Blackwell Ultra.

Huang didn't just claim it was more powerful than its predecessor, Hopper. He declared that it is 40 times more powerful. Not 40%—40x.1

That's not a speed bump; that's a paradigm shift.

Huang, never one to shy away from showmanship, quipped that he is Nvidia's "Chief Revenue Destroyer," acknowledging that this leap forward makes last-gen hardware practically obsolete overnight.