
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Award-winning journalist Stephen Witt sits down with Josh and Robb to share insights from his latest book, The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World's Most Coveted Microchip. There’s a deep connection between Nvidia’s GPU chips and the neural networks powering the LLMs at the center of agentic AI. Witt’s book provides a captivating biography of Huang that details his radical approach to business and innovation, which has made Nvidia the most valuable company in the world (recently reaching a record-breaking market cap of $4 trillion). This episode explores this history of AI as well as the coming Omniverse and what the power of simulation will mean to businesses.
Buy Stephen Witt’s book! The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World's Most Coveted Microchip
---------- Support our show by supporting our sponsors!
This episode is supported through partnership with OneReach.ai
Experience the runtime for AI agents - a turnkey private architecture and tools for building enterprise AI agents with guardrails.
OneReach.ai’s award-winning AI agent orchestration platform meets the many requirements for seizing powerful new technologies in this pivotal moment.
Learn more at onereach.ai/ai-agents.
------------------------------------------------------------
The revised and second edition of our bestselling book, Age of Invisible Machines, is available now wherever you buy books! Amazon: https://a.co/d/axLFOhX
Episode Credits
Robb Wilson
Josh Tyson
Vishal Menon - Producer
Mykhailo Lytvynov - Audio/Video Editor & Sound Engineer
Daryna Moskovchuk - Graphic Design
Alla Slesarenko - Copy
Vira Prykhodko - Web Development
Elias Parker - Executive Producer
#InvisibleMachines
#Podcast
#TechPodcast
#AI
#AgenticAI
#AIPodcast
#Nvidia
#TechTrends
#EnterpriseAI
#TheThinkingMachine
#FutureofWork
#TechBooks
#Business
#Innovation
#simulation
#omniverse
#jensenhuang
By Invisible Machines4.6
1212 ratings
Award-winning journalist Stephen Witt sits down with Josh and Robb to share insights from his latest book, The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World's Most Coveted Microchip. There’s a deep connection between Nvidia’s GPU chips and the neural networks powering the LLMs at the center of agentic AI. Witt’s book provides a captivating biography of Huang that details his radical approach to business and innovation, which has made Nvidia the most valuable company in the world (recently reaching a record-breaking market cap of $4 trillion). This episode explores this history of AI as well as the coming Omniverse and what the power of simulation will mean to businesses.
Buy Stephen Witt’s book! The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World's Most Coveted Microchip
---------- Support our show by supporting our sponsors!
This episode is supported through partnership with OneReach.ai
Experience the runtime for AI agents - a turnkey private architecture and tools for building enterprise AI agents with guardrails.
OneReach.ai’s award-winning AI agent orchestration platform meets the many requirements for seizing powerful new technologies in this pivotal moment.
Learn more at onereach.ai/ai-agents.
------------------------------------------------------------
The revised and second edition of our bestselling book, Age of Invisible Machines, is available now wherever you buy books! Amazon: https://a.co/d/axLFOhX
Episode Credits
Robb Wilson
Josh Tyson
Vishal Menon - Producer
Mykhailo Lytvynov - Audio/Video Editor & Sound Engineer
Daryna Moskovchuk - Graphic Design
Alla Slesarenko - Copy
Vira Prykhodko - Web Development
Elias Parker - Executive Producer
#InvisibleMachines
#Podcast
#TechPodcast
#AI
#AgenticAI
#AIPodcast
#Nvidia
#TechTrends
#EnterpriseAI
#TheThinkingMachine
#FutureofWork
#TechBooks
#Business
#Innovation
#simulation
#omniverse
#jensenhuang

32,045 Listeners

30,695 Listeners

1,093 Listeners

3,160 Listeners

433 Listeners

610 Listeners

320 Listeners

10,293 Listeners

4,162 Listeners

212 Listeners

198 Listeners

107 Listeners

5,488 Listeners

16,095 Listeners

594 Listeners