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Nvidia now most valuable company in the world


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Team Green's market cap had surpassed the $3 trillion mark earlier this month but after a stock split and subsequent increases on its price, it's now valued at over $3.34 trillion, putting it just above Microsoft and Apple.

 

Nvidia's shares are up another 3.5% today, closing at $135.58. The company's share price has increased by more than 3,400% over the past five years and 181% this year alone.

https://www.techspot.com/news/103281-nvidia-surpasses-3-trillion-market-cap-outshining-apple.html

 

 

How much higher can they go? 

 

 

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Absolutely nuts how in the past two years they have just carried on climbing that ladder. However they correctly capitalized on AI and diversifying their product range so they deserve the success. Even if it sucks they have no competition and for us standard consumers means we will still be paying over the odds for GPU's 😞 

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5 hours ago, ENTERPRISE said:

Absolutely nuts how in the past two years they have just carried on climbing that ladder. However they correctly capitalized on AI and diversifying their product range so they deserve the success. Even if it sucks they have no competition and for us standard consumers means we will still be paying over the odds for GPU's 😞 

Totally agree.

 

I spend a lot of time thinking about where this all is headed. Did you know; from the time the Wright Brothers completed the first flight to the first man on the moon was only 66 years. That's crazy, that someone who was 10 years old when the Wright Brother flight happened in 1903 could easily have lived to see the lunar landing and not even be 80 years old. Now, we are about to enter an era of autonomous humanoid robots, and that could start taking off this decade. 

 

Minecarts were invented sometime in the 1500s. If we assume that by year 2100 humans will be building very capable general-purpose robots in ample supply, then the entire era of human advancement in which we as a species go from working coal mines with minecarts - to building robots that can do the same work so we don't have to - is less than 600 years. If we just go from the first processor (4004) to year 2100, that's less than 140 years. using the year 2100 as a placeholder for the sake of discussion makes these advancements sound quick, but I don't think anyone familiar with this thinks it will take nearly that long. If I had to guess, less than 5 years until serious general-purpose robots are on the market and in 15 years, they will be somewhat common. Even if I am way off, one thing that is for certain; we are truly living in the midst of possibly the fastest technological advancement that may ever take place in human history, and for sure the fastest that has ever occurred thus far. 

 

It all makes me feel very uncertain about the future. Not in a bad way, just that I really have no idea what the world will be like in 10, 20, 30 years. It seems that within my lifetime, assuming I live to be at least 70, things will most likely be very different from today. What happens when robots that can do most of the labor are affordable and abundant? Do people still work? Do we still pay taxes? Do we still have wars? Does this all go horribly wrong and cause some new disaster? That last one seems unlikely, but still possible. 

 

 

And with all that said, where does that leave Nvidia right now? I think a good analogy is: Nvidia's market position today is as if there were a company that had a natural monopoly on coal during the industrial revolution. They have the tools to build the next tech revolution. Other companies like Intel and AMD may someday offer competition, but can they ever catch up? Does having the best AI/NPU hardware enable Nvidia to iterate harder, better, faster, stronger than anyone else? Does this all turn into an exponential curve of growth that feeds back into itself, speeding up further growth? 

 

 

There is just so much to think about. The fact that Nvidia has risen so far so quickly already is very clear evidence of something new and major happening in the tech world at the very least. 

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17 hours ago, UltraMega said:

Totally agree.

 

I spend a lot of time thinking about where this all is headed. Did you know; from the time the Wright Brothers completed the first flight to the first man on the moon was only 66 years. That's crazy, that someone who was 10 years old when the Wright Brother flight happened in 1903 could easily have lived to see the lunar landing and not even be 80 years old. Now, we are about to enter an era of autonomous humanoid robots, and that could start taking off this decade. 

 

Minecarts were invented sometime in the 1500s. If we assume that by year 2100 humans will be building very capable general-purpose robots in ample supply, then the entire era of human advancement in which we as a species go from working coal mines with minecarts - to building robots that can do the same work so we don't have to - is less than 600 years. If we just go from the first processor (4004) to year 2100, that's less than 140 years. using the year 2100 as a placeholder for the sake of discussion makes these advancements sound quick, but I don't think anyone familiar with this thinks it will take nearly that long. If I had to guess, less than 5 years until serious general-purpose robots are on the market and in 15 years, they will be somewhat common. Even if I am way off, one thing that is for certain; we are truly living in the midst of possibly the fastest technological advancement that may ever take place in human history, and for sure the fastest that has ever occurred thus far. 

 

It all makes me feel very uncertain about the future. Not in a bad way, just that I really have no idea what the world will be like in 10, 20, 30 years. It seems that within my lifetime, assuming I live to be at least 70, things will most likely be very different from today. What happens when robots that can do most of the labor are affordable and abundant? Do people still work? Do we still pay taxes? Do we still have wars? Does this all go horribly wrong and cause some new disaster? That last one seems unlikely, but still possible. 

 

 

And with all that said, where does that leave Nvidia right now? I think a good analogy is: Nvidia's market position today is as if there were a company that had a natural monopoly on coal during the industrial revolution. They have the tools to build the next tech revolution. Other companies like Intel and AMD may someday offer competition, but can they ever catch up? Does having the best AI/NPU hardware enable Nvidia to iterate harder, better, faster, stronger than anyone else? Does this all turn into an exponential curve of growth that feeds back into itself, speeding up further growth? 

 

 

There is just so much to think about. The fact that Nvidia has risen so far so quickly already is very clear evidence of something new and major happening in the tech world at the very least. 

All good questions. It goes without saying that we are experiencing advancements at an alarming rate. I use alarming as while technological advancements on the surface are excellent, we are experiencing them at an ever quicker pace which begs the question, are we going to fast without really realising the negative effects? Are we doing things now my just because we can, while blindly heading into an abyss. Only history can be the judge of that. 

 

The word in 20 years technology wise will be leaps ahead of what we have now and whilst we can speculate where we will be and what we will have, its still hard to imagine living it. Time will tell. 

 

Ironically Microsoft took back the title of most valuable company.

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