Nvidia is changing its business focus by looking beyond major cloud providers like Google, Amazon, and Microsoft.
The chipmaker is working on new AI partnerships with governments, corporations, and rising tech challengers. This move is meant to reduce its heavy reliance on “hyperscalers,” which currently bring in more than half of Nvidia’s data center revenue.
The shift follows Nvidia’s multibillion-dollar chip deal with Saudi Arabia’s Humain and the UAE’s plan to build a large data center with U.S. support. These efforts are part of a rising trend called “sovereign AI,” where countries invest in their own national AI infrastructure.
Nvidia is also supporting smaller companies like CoreWeave, Nebius, Crusoe, and Lambda—new players in the cloud computing space. CoreWeave was the first to offer Nvidia’s latest Blackwell platform to the public.
To reach more enterprise customers, Nvidia is partnering with Cisco, Dell, and HP, helping businesses that manage their own IT systems.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said he now feels more confident about this strategy than he did a year ago.
In addition, Nvidia is focusing on what it calls “embodied intelligence”—AI that can act and make decisions in the real world. This includes areas like manufacturing, transportation, and biotech.
At a recent tech conference in Singapore, Nvidia shared research on robotics, autonomous vehicles, healthcare, and AI models, showing continued partnerships with companies like Google, GE Healthcare, and GM.
Nvidia’s goal is clear: expand AI beyond Silicon Valley and into global industries.
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