Difference between revisions of "Jensen Huang - NVIDIA"

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! colspan="2" style="text-align: center; font-size: 125%;" | Jensen Huang
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  <title>Jensen Huang - Wikipedia</title>
<!-- | colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | [[File:Jensen_Huang_2023.jpg|250px]] -->
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| Born
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| February 17, 1963<br>Taipei, Taiwan
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| Nationality
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| Taiwanese<br>American
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| Education
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| Oregon State University (BS)<br>Stanford University (MS)
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| Occupation
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| Businessman<br>Electrical engineer<br>Philanthropist
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| Known for
  <h1>Jensen Huang</h1>
| Co-founding Nvidia
  <p class="lead">
|-
    Jen-Hsun "Jensen" Huang (Chinese: 黃仁勳; pinyin: Huáng Rénxūn; born February 17, 1963) is a Taiwanese-American businessman, electrical engineer, and philanthropist who is the co-founder, president, and CEO of <a href="#">Nvidia</a>, the world’s largest semiconductor company.
| Title
  </p>
| President and CEO of Nvidia (1993–present)
|-
| Spouse
| Lori Huang (m. 1985)
|-
| Children
| 2
|-
| Relatives
| Lisa Su (cousin)
|-
| Awards
| IEEE Founders Medal (2020)<br>VinFuture Prize (2024)<br>Edison Award (2024)<br>Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering (2025)
|}


  <table class="infobox">
'''Jen-Hsun "Jensen" Huang''' (黃仁勳, Huáng Rénxūn; born February 17, 1963) is a Taiwanese-American businessman, electrical engineer, and philanthropist. He is the co-founder, president, and chief executive officer (CEO) of Nvidia, a leading semiconductor and AI company.
    <tr>
      <th colspan="2"><b>Jensen Huang</b></th>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td colspan="2" style="text-align:center"><img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/placeholder.jpg" alt="Huang in 2023" style="width:100%"><br><small>Huang in 2023</small></td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Born</th>
      <td>February 17, 1963<br>Taipei, Taiwan</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Citizenship</th>
      <td>United States<br>Taiwan</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Education</th>
      <td>Oregon State University (BS)<br>Stanford University (MS)</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Occupation</th>
      <td>Businessman<br>Electrical engineer<br>Philanthropist</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Known for</th>
      <td>Co-founding Nvidia</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Title</th>
      <td>President and CEO of Nvidia (1993–present)</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Spouse</th>
      <td>Lori Huang (m. 1985)</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Children</th>
      <td>2</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Relatives</th>
      <td>Lisa Su (cousin)</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <th>Awards</th>
      <td>
        IEEE Founders Medal (2020)<br>
        VinFuture Prize (2024)<br>
        Edison Award (2024)<br>
        Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering (2025)
      </td>
    </tr>
  </table>


  <h2 class="mw-headline">Early life and education</h2>
In 2025, ''Forbes'' estimated Huang's net worth at US$144 billion, making him the ninth richest person in the world.
  <p>Jensen Huang was born in Taipei, Taiwan, on February 17, 1963. He spent his early childhood in Thailand before moving to the United States. His family initially settled in Kentucky before relocating to Oregon. Huang graduated from Aloha High School at age 16 and later earned a BS in electrical engineering from Oregon State University in 1984 and an MS in the same field from Stanford University in 1992.</p>


  <h2 class="mw-headline">Career</h2>
== Early life and education ==
Huang was born in Taipei and raised in Tainan, Taiwan, before moving to Thailand. He studied at Ruamrudee International School in Bangkok. At age nine, he and his brother were sent to the United States, living in Tacoma, Washington, and later attending school in Oneida, Kentucky.


  <h3 class="mw-headline">Early career</h3>
Huang's family eventually settled in Beaverton, Oregon, where he attended Aloha High School. He graduated at age sixteen and worked night shifts at Denny's. He earned a BS in electrical engineering from Oregon State University in 1984, and an MS from Stanford University in 1992.
  <p>Upon graduation, Huang worked at AMD and later LSI Logic, where he met future Nvidia co-founders Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem. The three developed the GX graphics engine, which became widely successful.</p>


  <h3 class="mw-headline">Nvidia</h3>
== Career ==
  <p>In 1993, Huang co-founded Nvidia from a booth at Denny’s restaurant in San Jose. As CEO, he guided the company through the development of its first chips, financial instability, and eventually its transformation into a global leader in GPU and AI technologies. Under his leadership, Nvidia reached a market cap of $4 trillion in 2025.</p>


  <h2 class="mw-headline">Philanthropy</h2>
=== Early work ===
  <p>Huang has donated millions to educational institutions, including Stanford University, Oregon State University, and the Oneida Baptist Institute. He is also known for contributions following natural disasters in China and ongoing support for education and research in computing.</p>
Huang began his career designing microprocessors at AMD, then moved to LSI Logic. There, he co-developed the GX graphics engine and met his future Nvidia co-founders, Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem.


  <h2 class="mw-headline">Awards and honors</h2>
=== Nvidia ===
  <ul>
In 1993, Huang co-founded Nvidia with Malachowsky and Priem. The idea was born at a Denny's restaurant in San Jose. The name “Nvidia” was derived from the Latin word ''invidia'' (envy).
    <li>2020: IEEE Founders Medal</li>
    <li>2024: Edison Award</li>
    <li>2024: VinFuture Prize</li>
    <li>2025: Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering</li>
  </ul>


  <h2 class="mw-headline">Personal life</h2>
Huang became CEO from inception and has led Nvidia for over three decades. He helped secure critical funding and steered the company through early struggles. The launch of the RIVA 128 GPU in 1997 was Nvidia’s first major commercial success.
  <p>Huang is married to Lori Huang and they have two children, Spencer and Madison. The family resides in California and maintains ties to Taiwan. He is related to Lisa Su, CEO of AMD, and is close with prominent tech leaders such as Morris Chang.</p>


  <hr>
Huang positioned Nvidia as a leader in GPUs, high-performance computing, and later, artificial intelligence. The company grew rapidly in the 2020s and became the first to reach a $4 trillion market cap in 2025.


  <h1>Huang's law</h1>
=== Leadership style and public image ===
  <p class="lead"><b>Huang's law</b> is an empirical observation that the performance of graphics processing units (GPUs) is improving at a rate faster than traditional central processing units (CPUs), surpassing even Moore’s law in performance growth for certain applications.</p>
Known for a hands-on, informal leadership style, Huang avoids using a personal office. He became a global tech icon in the AI era, especially in Taiwan, where fans refer to his visits as “Jensanity.


  <h2 class="mw-headline">History</h2>
== Huang's law ==
  <p>The law was proposed by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang in 2018, who noted that Nvidia’s GPU performance had increased 25-fold over five years, outpacing Moore’s law. He attributed this to synergistic advances in software, hardware, and AI.</p>
Huang's law is an observation by Jensen Huang that GPU performance is increasing faster than CPU performance — more than doubling every two years, outpacing Moore’s law.


  <h2 class="mw-headline">Reception</h2>
At Nvidia's 2018 GPU Technology Conference, Huang stated that Nvidia’s GPUs had become 25 times faster over five years, compared to Moore’s law's predicted tenfold increase. He credited this to improvements in architecture, AI, and software integration.
  <p>While industry leaders praised the observation, some critics consider Huang’s law premature or misattributed. GPU performance improvements remain significant but not universally exponential across all metrics or workloads.</p>


  <footer>
Some critics dispute Huang’s law as overly optimistic, but many in the industry acknowledge that accelerators like GPUs offer performance scaling not seen in conventional CPUs.
    <p><small>This article incorporates material from Wikipedia and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.</small></p>
 
  </footer>
== Philanthropy ==
</body>
Huang has supported major philanthropic initiatives, including:
</html>
* Donating $30 million to Stanford University for the Jen-Hsun Huang Engineering Center.
* Donating $2 million to Oneida Baptist Institute to build Huang Hall.
* Donating $50 million to Oregon State University for an AI and supercomputing institute.
* Supporting educational efforts after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake in China.
 
== Awards and honors ==
* 1999: Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year (Technology)
* 2002: Daniel J. Epstein Engineering Management Award
* 2004: Dr. Morris Chang Exemplary Leadership Award
* 2005: Alumni Fellow, Oregon State University
* 2009: Honorary Doctorate, Oregon State University
* 2020: IEEE Founders Medal
* 2021, 2024: Time 100
* 2023: Time 100 AI
* 2024: Edison Award, VinFuture Prize
* 2025: Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering
 
== Personal life ==
Huang met his wife, Lori, while studying at Oregon State University. They have two children: Spencer and Madison, who both work at Nvidia. The family resides in Los Altos Hills, California, with additional homes in San Francisco and Wailea, Hawaii.
 
He is related to Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD, and holds dual Taiwanese and American citizenship. He is fluent in Taiwanese Hokkien.
 
== Relationships ==
Huang maintains relationships with industry figures including Morris Chang of TSMC and Charles Liang of Supermicro. Nvidia and Supermicro regularly collaborate on hardware using Nvidia chips.
 
== References ==
* Stephen Witt. ''The Thinking Machine: Jensen Huang, Nvidia, and the World's Most Coveted Microchip.'' PDF editions available:
** [https://wiki.snakesoft.eu/ref/books/stars/The%20Thinking%20Machine%20-%20Jensen%20Huang,%20Nvidia,%20and%20the%20Worlds%20Most%20Coveted%20Microchip-CN.pdf The Thinking Machine (Chinese edition)]
** [https://wiki.snakesoft.eu/ref/books/stars/The%20Thinking%20Machine%20-%20Jensen%20Huang,%20Nvidia,%20and%20the%20Worlds%20Most%20Coveted%20Microchip-EN.pdf The Thinking Machine (English edition)]
 
== External links ==
* [https://www.forbes.com/profile/jensen-huang/ Jensen Huang profile – Forbes]

Latest revision as of 19:47, 16 July 2025

Jensen Huang
Born February 17, 1963
Taipei, Taiwan
Nationality Taiwanese
American
Education Oregon State University (BS)
Stanford University (MS)
Occupation Businessman
Electrical engineer
Philanthropist
Known for Co-founding Nvidia
Title President and CEO of Nvidia (1993–present)
Spouse Lori Huang (m. 1985)
Children 2
Relatives Lisa Su (cousin)
Awards IEEE Founders Medal (2020)
VinFuture Prize (2024)
Edison Award (2024)
Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering (2025)

Jen-Hsun "Jensen" Huang (黃仁勳, Huáng Rénxūn; born February 17, 1963) is a Taiwanese-American businessman, electrical engineer, and philanthropist. He is the co-founder, president, and chief executive officer (CEO) of Nvidia, a leading semiconductor and AI company.

In 2025, Forbes estimated Huang's net worth at US$144 billion, making him the ninth richest person in the world.

Early life and education[edit | edit source]

Huang was born in Taipei and raised in Tainan, Taiwan, before moving to Thailand. He studied at Ruamrudee International School in Bangkok. At age nine, he and his brother were sent to the United States, living in Tacoma, Washington, and later attending school in Oneida, Kentucky.

Huang's family eventually settled in Beaverton, Oregon, where he attended Aloha High School. He graduated at age sixteen and worked night shifts at Denny's. He earned a BS in electrical engineering from Oregon State University in 1984, and an MS from Stanford University in 1992.

Career[edit | edit source]

Early work[edit | edit source]

Huang began his career designing microprocessors at AMD, then moved to LSI Logic. There, he co-developed the GX graphics engine and met his future Nvidia co-founders, Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem.

Nvidia[edit | edit source]

In 1993, Huang co-founded Nvidia with Malachowsky and Priem. The idea was born at a Denny's restaurant in San Jose. The name “Nvidia” was derived from the Latin word invidia (envy).

Huang became CEO from inception and has led Nvidia for over three decades. He helped secure critical funding and steered the company through early struggles. The launch of the RIVA 128 GPU in 1997 was Nvidia’s first major commercial success.

Huang positioned Nvidia as a leader in GPUs, high-performance computing, and later, artificial intelligence. The company grew rapidly in the 2020s and became the first to reach a $4 trillion market cap in 2025.

Leadership style and public image[edit | edit source]

Known for a hands-on, informal leadership style, Huang avoids using a personal office. He became a global tech icon in the AI era, especially in Taiwan, where fans refer to his visits as “Jensanity.”

Huang's law[edit | edit source]

Huang's law is an observation by Jensen Huang that GPU performance is increasing faster than CPU performance — more than doubling every two years, outpacing Moore’s law.

At Nvidia's 2018 GPU Technology Conference, Huang stated that Nvidia’s GPUs had become 25 times faster over five years, compared to Moore’s law's predicted tenfold increase. He credited this to improvements in architecture, AI, and software integration.

Some critics dispute Huang’s law as overly optimistic, but many in the industry acknowledge that accelerators like GPUs offer performance scaling not seen in conventional CPUs.

Philanthropy[edit | edit source]

Huang has supported major philanthropic initiatives, including:

  • Donating $30 million to Stanford University for the Jen-Hsun Huang Engineering Center.
  • Donating $2 million to Oneida Baptist Institute to build Huang Hall.
  • Donating $50 million to Oregon State University for an AI and supercomputing institute.
  • Supporting educational efforts after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake in China.

Awards and honors[edit | edit source]

  • 1999: Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year (Technology)
  • 2002: Daniel J. Epstein Engineering Management Award
  • 2004: Dr. Morris Chang Exemplary Leadership Award
  • 2005: Alumni Fellow, Oregon State University
  • 2009: Honorary Doctorate, Oregon State University
  • 2020: IEEE Founders Medal
  • 2021, 2024: Time 100
  • 2023: Time 100 AI
  • 2024: Edison Award, VinFuture Prize
  • 2025: Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering

Personal life[edit | edit source]

Huang met his wife, Lori, while studying at Oregon State University. They have two children: Spencer and Madison, who both work at Nvidia. The family resides in Los Altos Hills, California, with additional homes in San Francisco and Wailea, Hawaii.

He is related to Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD, and holds dual Taiwanese and American citizenship. He is fluent in Taiwanese Hokkien.

Relationships[edit | edit source]

Huang maintains relationships with industry figures including Morris Chang of TSMC and Charles Liang of Supermicro. Nvidia and Supermicro regularly collaborate on hardware using Nvidia chips.

References[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]