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Guy Raz
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Guy Raz
You may have heard the best voice in show business, Morgan Freeman, talking about a serious and underdiagnosed heart condition that's often ATTR cardiac amyloidosis, or attrcm. It's a condition that can greatly disrupt your life, with symptoms like severe fatigue, shortness of breath and carpal tunnel. If left untreated, ATTRCM may become serious, leading to a shorter lifespan. A truby helps adults with ATTRCM live longer and have fewer hospitalizations due to heart issues, so you can focus more on living for what you love. Tell your doctor if you're pregnant, plan to become pregnant, or are breastfeeding, and about the medications you take. The most common side effects were mild and included diarrhea and abdominal pain. If you have attrcm, talk to your cardiologist about a truby and visit attruby.com podcast that's a T podcast to learn more. It's time to get busy living. Brought to you by Bridge Bio.
Interviewer
We sort of have the outlines of all of the troughs and there are a lot of troughs and I'm trying to even imagine, like, quarterly earning calls in 2007 when your stock price is in the toilet and you're putting.
Jensen Huang
I gotta tell you, it was embarrassing. It was humiliating. Your employees are probably embarrassed for you. In fact, you know, right now, it is really quite hard for me to resurface those feelings. And the reason for that is I spend all of my time, all of my life trying to forget yesterday.
Interviewer
Right.
Jensen Huang
What do they teach athletes? Forget the last point. Yeah. It's about forgetting.
Guy Raz
Welcome to How I Built this, a show about innovators, entrepreneurs, idealists, and the stories behind the movements they built. I'm Guy Raz, and on the show today, how Jensen Huang went from making graphics chips for gamers to powering the AI revolution and building the biggest company in the world. If Nvidia were a country, it would be one of the five richest in the world, just behind the US and China. Nvidia's value is now more than the entire economic output of Japan or the UK or France. That's how big this company is. And it's also probably the single most important company in the world right now. It is the biggest player powering the AI revolution. But Nvidia didn't start out that way. The company actually began by selling graphics processors for video games. And for a good 20 years, gamers were Nvidia's main customers. But back in the 2000s, the company's co founder, Jensen Huang, made a pretty important bet. A bet that those graphics processors known as GPUs, could actually do a lot more than just power video games. He believed these processors could be the cornerstone for the future of supercomputing. This was a very bold and very expensive idea. Now, bear with me for a moment here, because if you're not super familiar with the technical terms around AI and computing, I will do my best to explain. So think of a computer like a kitchen. The cpu, or central processing unit, is like a master chef. It's really smart. It can do almost anything, but it can only cook a small number of dishes at a time. The gpu, or graphics processing unit, is like a kitchen with thousands of line cooks. Each one isn't as talented as the chef, but together, these guys can crank out thousands of simple tasks all at once. Now, to make that kitchen do even more, Jensen poured billions of dollars into developing a platform and software layer called cuda, which is basically the instruction manual that lets you use all those line cooks in entirely new ways. So what CUDA basically did is turn the GPU from a video game tool into a general purpose supercomputer. The problem with it, though, is that it was way ahead of its time. Only a tiny number of users, mostly university researchers, had any need for it. And so every single Nvidia processor sold to a teenager playing video games was actually very sophisticated, and yet that teenager had no need for it. And so for nearly a decade, Nvidia was stalled. The stock price stayed flat. Sometimes it actually fell. And at one point, there were rumors of a hostile takeover bid. Many investors were losing faith. A lot of them were dumping the stock. And people outside the company were questioning Jensen's obsession with Cuda. But he kept going. He withstood massive pressure to move away from it because he really believed in the power of this platform, which may be the most remarkable thing about this story, because a decade after Nvidia started this experiment, the bet started to pay off. And when it did, it was like every slot machine in the casino hit at once. Nvidia's chips found a massive new market in the emerging world of artificial intelligence. And today Nvidia is at the center of it. Their chips dominate the computing power needed to power AI. So how did Jensen Huang see it coming? What did he believe that others didn't? And what does he think about where all this is going to? That's what I wanted to find out when I sat down with him at Nvidia headquarters in Santa Clara, California. Jensen Huang was born in Taiwan in the early 1960s. He spent some of his childhood in Thailand. And when he was about nine years old, his parents started to get worried about political unrest in Thailand and decided to move to the U.S. they sent Jensen and one of his brothers ahead of the rest of the family to what they thought was, was a normal boarding school.
Jensen Huang
And there weren't that many boarding schools in America that would take international students, but somehow Oneida Baptist Institute in Kentucky. Clay County, Kentucky. Little tiny town, no stoplight. And there was a school on this small, small mound, you know, kind of a small hill. But the, probably the most important feature was that it was a boarding school. And it was incredibly affordable because my parents didn't have much money. And so we went there, and every kid that lived there had to work. And so they had no custodians. And so we were, you know, we took care of ourselves. And my job was to clean the bathrooms. And apparently I was the youngest kid that ever went there. I still am, I think, because you were 10. I was nine when I went there. Yeah, I've got great memories of it. I Loved the place. It was a tough school because they invited kids from all walks of life. And so, you know, I was nine and my roommate was 16. And so none of the closet had doors and none of the drawers because everything had to be out in the open. You just don't know what the kids are going to have. And so welcome to America.
Interviewer
Yeah, right.
Jensen Huang
But I loved it. It was incredible. I was on the swim team and the soccer team. And then afterwards, the coach would take you out to give you a treat. And I remember recording. We used to record a tape and we send it back to our parents. You know, we didn't. Long distance phone calls cost too much money. And so we never spoke to them live or until they came to United States almost two years later. And so we would record, you know, what happened this last month. And I remember, I remember telling them that after the swim meet, the coach took us to this incredible restaurant and lights everywhere. It's like from outer space. And all the food was in boxes and it was McDonald's.
Interviewer
It's McDonald's. Yeah. Which was magical.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. Incredible.
Interviewer
You eventually reunite with your family in Poland, which is where your dad settles, and you grew up there and you went on to, this is early, late 70s, early 80s. You go to Oregon State and this is like the beginning of what would become the computer revolution. You are studying electrical engineering because I don't think they had a computer science program there at the time. And that's also where you would meet the person who would become your wife.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, so when I was in high school, I wasn't very outgoing, and so I didn't have that many friends. All of my best friends were in two clubs. One club was the math club, and then the other club was the computer club.
Interviewer
Nice.
Jensen Huang
It was the same, you know, four kids.
Interviewer
The same guys?
Jensen Huang
Yeah, the same four kids. And my best friend in high school, I asked him, you know, where he was going to college, and he said, Oregon State. And he asked me where I was going to college and never crossed my mind to go anywhere out of town for, you know, the idea of going to a great university never crossed my mind. And so he said he was going to Oregon State. I said, yeah, that sounds great. I'll go to Oregon State. And so we were roommates. And there we both enrolled in electrical engineering. And our lab, the class had 200, must have 250 kids. It was a big, big class. And there were three girls, you know, and so I noticed Lori is a super pretty girl and I was probably the Youngest kid in class then as well. I skipped two grades in school. So we were in lab together, and I found a way to arranged myself into the same lab as her, same group as her. And so we became lab partners.
Interviewer
And here we are, both of you, after you graduate, moved to California. This is like 1984ish, I think, which is the center of the revolution, right? I mean, your first job was with amd.
Jensen Huang
Yeah.
Interviewer
And I think she also had a job, Silicon Graphics. Silicon Graphics, yeah. What did it look like to design computer chips in 1984? I mean, was it CAD? Was it. What did that look? What did that actually physically entail?
Jensen Huang
Yeah, well, at the time, I was the last generation of chip designers that did it by hand, and the first generation of chip designers that use software to design chips that ran into computers that ran software. And so it was an incredible time. You know, kind of to put in perspective at the time, the chip I was working on had a few thousand transistors. And now we design chips that are 200 billion. A trillion transistors.
Interviewer
Insane.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. So the scale of the problems that we work on now compared to where we started is incredible. But anyhow, my office mate went off to work for a startup company called LSI Logic, and she called me and said, hey, you know, this is really quite a special company. You ought to come take a look. And so I went to take a look at LSI Logic, and it turned out this is an extraordinary company and completely revolutionary in what they were doing, really, in a lot of ways, invented the modern way of doing designing, the way of designing chips. And so I joined them, I guess I was, you know, probably employee number 150 or 170 or something like that.
Interviewer
And you were like 22 probably at the time?
Jensen Huang
Yeah, I was just a kid. I was just a kid. Yeah.
Interviewer
And from what I, like, from what I've read, I mean, they gave you a lot of responsibility. I mean, they, they. I mean, you were. Eventually, you would be in charge of tooling, right? Like, that was sort of what you oversaw.
Jensen Huang
The way LSI Logic's business worked is they had all the technology, the tools, and they made the chips, but they would make it for somebody else who created computers. And so Sun Microsystems and Silicon Graphics and incredible companies at the time in Silicon Valley who were systems companies, but they needed a chip company to help them build the chips. And so the CEO of LSI Logic recognized my talents and put me in front of all these companies to help them. And I met some incredible People, I mean, you were.
Interviewer
This is sort of like the PC boom, the Clone Wars. I mean, there was a lot of demand for what LSI was producing. Right. I mean, it was an exciting time to be here, to be young and to watch. You know, probably the next most exciting time would happen with the Internet boom. Right.
Jensen Huang
Well, LSI Logic was an extraordinary company because it happened at precisely the time exactly as you're saying, guy, that mini computers, mini supercomputers. Supercomputers, all of those types of giant systems were being created by companies like Digital. And then the PC revolution started. And so I was really in the right place at the right time. And I saw new industries being created, saw a lot of great startups, and I was able to see firsthand, you know, companies being built and great technology, bad strategy, moderate technology, excellent strategy. I saw it all. It was quite an incredible thing. And then of course, I met Chris and Curtis.
Interviewer
Those people, Curtis Prem and Chris Malkowski and Chris Malkowski were at Sun. The story is that these guys wanted to create Ed Sun Microsystems a. A chip for specifications for computer graphics, for computer graphics, for games, and were rebuffed. And so as often as the case, they decided to start their own company.
Jensen Huang
Yeah.
Interviewer
And they approached you and they wanted you to work with them. And this is around 1992. 93. And from what I understand, I mean, you had a great job, you were well paid, you were well on the path to upper management. Like this could have been a great, stable career. You already had, I think, at least one kid at the time, Spencer Madison.
Jensen Huang
Madison, yeah.
Interviewer
And your wife was looking after the kids, so everyone depended on your salary, you know, and I think we had
Jensen Huang
a whopping $30,000 in the bank when
Interviewer
they initially approached you. I mean, did you think that I'm not going to take that risk, I'm not going to leave this amazing job.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, I mean, they. But they didn't give up asking me.
Interviewer
Because they wanted you to run there this business that they had an idea for.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. But I think in the end what we got excited about was probably just the PC revolution in the end, that here's the first time a computer was going to be general purpose and you're going to use it for all kinds of different applications. And if it had computer graphics, like what people were seeing with Jurassic park and Silicon Graphics, and if we could figure out a way to make it affordable and architect something that would fit into a personal computer architecture, you know, maybe there's a company here, but I
Interviewer
mean, at the time, There were like 60 companies trying to do this Right. And so was there any part of you. Do you remember any part of you thinking, God, what if this doesn't work out?
Jensen Huang
No, I should have. It didn't. It didn't really.
Interviewer
You were. You were prepared for whatever happened would happen.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. Maybe that's what's called vision. Maybe that's determination comes from. But Nvidia manifested in my mind that and an industry manifested in my mind that was so crystal clear. Never once did it cross my mind it wouldn't work out.
Interviewer
So Nvidia is the company which I guess comes from the Latin word envy. Nvidia. And you guys start working on the first product, which is going to be a revolutionary graphics processing chip that is going to make.
Jensen Huang
We were the first 3D graphics company in the world that started with the idea that we bring 3D graphics to consumers.
Guy Raz
Yeah.
Interviewer
And so 1993, it's founded, and you start to work on this product and you guys raise a little bit of money to do it. And this is gonna be a game changer, right? I mean, this is gonna be like the coolest thing.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, we thought so. The technology that we created allowed us to generate images, but using a lot less electronics, a lot fewer chips, and a lot more affordable than these giant supercomputers that Silicon Graphics was making at the time. At the time, the computer that generated the images for Jurassic park would cost a million dollars at a time. And we needed to get something to fit into about 300 bucks. And so. And so that gap was so large that we had to reinvent the algorithms altogether. People got very excited about it.
Interviewer
This is the NV1A chip.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, we sold 250,000. I've now, you know, I believe you can sell 250,000 of almost anything. But the algorithm didn't really work. And so we received 250,000 back. I mean, it all came back.
Interviewer
It was not just our lesson. It was a disaster.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, it was probably a technology disaster. As great of a technology disaster ever seen. I think the right architecture, the right algorithm is inverse texture mapping. Ours was called forward texture mapping. At this point, there were probably 20, 33D graphics companies, and they were all doing it the right way. And we were the only one doing it this weird way. And Microsoft is about to announce Windows 95. And Windows 95 has a API called DirectX. And DirectX does it the right way. And we were incompatible with DirectX. And so anyways, we chose some approaches that were just fundamentally wrong.
Interviewer
I've read that that understandably created a lot of tension with you and your co founders because it was two and a half years of work. And from what I also understand is all the architecture that you'd created for the next NV2 and NV3 was based on.
Jensen Huang
On NV1.
Interviewer
On NV1. And so imagine, I mean, do you remember the three of you just going at it?
Jensen Huang
Yeah, well, the arguments, the argument was pretty stressful because we were, we had a contract with a company called Sega, the video game company. And they contracted us for $12 million in 1995, 1994.
Interviewer
And they were guaranteed to buy the NV2 and the NV3.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, to use it for our game console, the SEGA game console. And so we were contracted to do that already and we had invested two and a half years. And so the question is, how do we deal with this contract? If we cancel the contract, how does the company stay alive? And if we don't cancel the contract, you know, the company doesn't go out of business. And so there's the argument of let's not cancel the contract, let's keep on going. Then of course there's the argument the contract is based on an architecture that is fundamentally flawed. And so why finish something the wrong way? And it would have burned another two years. And in two years time, 30 other companies would have been so far ahead of us doing it the right way, we'll never catch up. And so this was the dilemma. And if we decide to change the architecture, we've got to go cancel the contract.
Interviewer
Right.
Jensen Huang
And so I went to Japan and I contacted the CEO of sega, Sega, his name is Irimadry. And I told him my recommendation for you is that Sega finds another partner to build the 3D graphics system for their next game console. I have a request, however, that even though we're not finishing the contract, I still needed the money because if we didn't have the money, the company would be out of business. And I really believe the company deserves to succeed. And so I asked him if he would convert the rest of the contract to an investment in our company. And he says, but Jensen, you know, Your company has 30 competitors. You're most likely going to go out of business. I don't even know what your business plan is. And I was like, I tell you, I'm not sure what my business plan is, but my first job as the CEO is to make sure we don't go out of business. And we got to get the technology on the right track. And if you could help me with this, I think we'll figure out a way and I think it's going to be a great investment. Anyways, he talked to his board and they turned the rest of the $5 million of investment or contract into our investment in our company. I took that $5 million and we came back and I was incredibly grateful. Came back and here we are. The company was a little bit too big. I had to cut it back in half.
Interviewer
You were like 250 people or something, almost.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. And so I cut it back to.
Interviewer
Because you'd hired all these people anticipating NV1, NV2, NV3, it was gonna be successful. Right.
Jensen Huang
And we're gonna get all these Sega games, all these games into the PC industry. So anyways, I laid off two thirds of the company and it was incredibly hard to do.
Guy Raz
And also you now had to focus on making the NV3, which. Which was a new chip that would actually work. And I mean, to be clear, you needed to do this not only to
Interviewer
compete with all the other companies out
Guy Raz
there, but basically to save yourselves.
Interviewer
Right.
Guy Raz
To save Nvidia.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. Well, it's scary. It's scary even now. You're asking me. These are traumatic experiences 33 years ago. And so we decided, okay, first let's just decide to do things the right way, but we don't actually know how to do it the right way. And then the next problem I have is that we have $5 million. But by the time that we were done designing the chip, the company would have ran out of money before the chip comes back.
Interviewer
And the chips are being made in tsmc. By this point, you had already started working with TSMC in Taiwan because initially your chips are made in Europe, I think.
Jensen Huang
That's right.
Interviewer
Right.
Jensen Huang
That's right.
Interviewer
But the capacity wasn't there, so you had to move it. So this is like around 97, you start to shift production to Taiwan.
Jensen Huang
That's right.
Interviewer
And you would run out of money before they were able to produce them.
Jensen Huang
That's right. And so the problem was, back in the old days, you would design the chip, the chip comes back, you would write the software for the chip, fix whatever bugs you found, and then you would make the chip again. And that would go around a couple times.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
And back in the old days, it would take about a year and a half to two years to design a chip and get it to work and ship into production. Well, we didn't have a year and a half. We had about six months. We were on fumes. This was it.
Interviewer
You had no choice. You had to do it.
Jensen Huang
The chip had to be right, which
Interviewer
means you couldn't do all of the processes.
Jensen Huang
We couldn't iterate. Yeah, yeah, I couldn't prototype.
Interviewer
So how did you know it was going to work?
Jensen Huang
And so we heard about this company called iqos was building an emulator, and this incredible machine, this giant machine, it would pretend to be your chip. And so you would take all of your software and put it into this machine, and this machine would pretend to be the chip, and you would plug this machine into a PC and run
Interviewer
the software so you could see how it works.
Jensen Huang
So you could see how it would work. I was super excited.
Interviewer
It was airtight, accurate.
Jensen Huang
Well, supposedly. And so I called the company and I said, hey, listen, I heard you guys have this machine called Emulator. I would like to buy one. And they said, well, that's terrific. But unfortunately, we had no customer. Said, we're going out of business, but we have this one that's leftover. If you want, you could buy it out of the creditor who now owns it. And so we did. We bought this leftover piece of machinery from this company that ultimately went out of business. And I took half of our company's money. So we were already running on fumes. And so I cut that life short even further, took that money, bought this machine that nobody else wanted to buy, brought it to the company. I said, here we are. We've got to put Nvidia's chip MV3 Reva 128 into this machine.
Interviewer
Did anybody say, this is crazy?
Guy Raz
I mean, this is nuts.
Interviewer
You're taking half the money. I mean, you're the CEO.
Jensen Huang
We don't even have. That was the money we had was already not enough, and we took half of that and spent it.
Interviewer
But these engineers, who are used to a process, right, and used to a way of doing things, you're basically saying, we're going to put it in the emulator and that's going to be it, and then we're going to fabrication. I mean, did anybody say, this is not a good idea?
Jensen Huang
It was the only idea we had. I got to tell you, I didn't remember anybody objecting to it, but I also didn't remember asking too many people whether they objected to it. You know, I think smart engineers reason about things. I guess we always knew it was existential. We always knew we were going out of business. But I just remember us being super calm, super focused, and we just step by step by step, reason that it was the only chance for Us to be.
Interviewer
That had to work.
Jensen Huang
It had to be.
Interviewer
This is. I don't know if it's apocryphal, but I think it's true. You are known to say at that time, our company's 30 days away from going out of business. Yeah. And it kind of became a meme and a mantra for a while, but it was true. I mean, you were. So this had to work. This thing had to work. And we. I'm not revealing any secrets. It did work. It did actually work, mostly. But enough to save. Good enough to save the company.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, good enough to save the company.
Guy Raz
When we come back in just a moment, Jensen identifies a hole. Whole new market for Nvidia, a market that does not yet exist. Stay with us. I'm Guy Raz, and you're listening to How I Built this. Before every interview I do, there's a mountain of material. Books, notes, transcripts, research. And the difference between a good conversation and a great one usually comes down to how well I've absorbed all that stuff. Lately, I've been using the new Kindle Scribe to do some of that work. It lets me read and annotate everything in one place, especially PDFs. So if my team and I are going through a founder's memoir, I can highlight key passages or jot notes in the margins and then quickly pull those insights back up when I'm preparing for the interview. What I like is that it still feels like writing on paper, but it's a lot more powerful. You can search your handwritten notes, organize them instantly, even clean them up into readable text, which means less time digging through notebooks and more time actually thinking, what are you working on? I'm working on the new Kindle Scribe. Hey, welcome back to How I Built this. I'm Guy Raz. So it's the late 1990s, and Nvidia has escaped extinction by using an unproven machine to test its latest chip. And as it turns out, that new chip, the Riva 128, is a hit, which means the company can now write its next chapter.
Jensen Huang
We're 100% focused on the gaming industry. We were the first computer graphics company ever created to focus on one application industry fully, which was video games.
Guy Raz
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
So the way we saw the world, that the chip is important, but ultimately, what makes people happy and what really creates industries is the applications that were on top of the chips that make new things possible. Recognizing the importance of application developers or game developers, so that we can help them realize the full potential of our chip. While we make their application as wonderful as possible.
Interviewer
I know, I want to just pivot for a second because here you are, you're still a young guy in your late 30s, mid late 30s, running a company. It's the first time you are the CEO of a company. It's not like you have any management training or you didn't go to business school school, which is very normal. Right. And you kind of had to teach yourself because you have and had a reputation for being like a hard ass, yelling at people, demanding excellence, and really just tearing into people when they. When you feel like they didn't do great work. But I read that you stumbled upon this book by Christian Clayton. Clayton, forgive me, he's no longer alive. Harvard School. That's called the innovator syllable.
Jensen Huang
Yeah.
Interviewer
Very important book. And it had a huge impact on you. Like, you read this book because he has this example of, like, Honda, they were making motor scooters for kids and no one was paying attention to them. And so when they started making cars, they had this advantage because they could really scale quickly and get out there. And you read this book and you were inspired by it. What do you remember about that book that you thought, that's it. This is the thing that I need to think about.
Jensen Huang
The single most important thing about technology is the moment it becomes good enough. When you overserve the market, you're ready for disruption. In fact, at the Nvidia Journey, every single step of the way, we were always the disruptor. So I think the large lesson of Clay Christensen is really about disruption and how technology emerges out of thin air that apparently looks like toys, but went off to disrupt large markets. If you looked at Nvidia's Reaver 128, the quality of it was okay, but it was good enough that it disrupted an entire market. If you looked at Nvidia's first GPU that was designed for high performance computing, it was not perfect, but it was good enough. And so example after example after example, the way that we went off to revolutionize large industries, initially, it looks a little toyish, but the outcome has always been the same.
Guy Raz
All right, so I want to jump
Interviewer
ahead a little, because in the late
Guy Raz
90s, Nvidia developed a new technology called parallel computing. And this basically gave your chips the
Interviewer
ability to perform multiple calculations at the
Guy Raz
same time, multiple tasks. Right. But this was another gamble because I think a lot of other companies had tried and failed to produce parallel computing chips.
Interviewer
Right.
Jensen Huang
During that time, there were all kinds of different processors being created and people were trying to come up with new ways of doing computation. And then we realized that computer graphics, if it was just beautiful, but the world was static, it was hard to create beautiful and immersive worlds. And so you really need to find a way to bring physics into that virtual world so that, you know, waters would flow and leaves would blow in the wind and explosions would look like explosions. And so we would try to use the processor, which was incredibly parallel, to express, you know, the types of algorithms that represent real time physics today. And so that was really the beginning of our journey down that world of general purpose programmability. Meanwhile, scientists around the world noticed that Nvidia's processors were super powerful.
Interviewer
Lots of multiple things, because you were thinking, okay, this could be used by game designers, maybe in the film industry, which it eventually would be. But still, it was like you were thinking beyond people playing video games on their consoles or on their PCs.
Jensen Huang
We would use it for fluid dynamics and image processing and particle physics and. And one of the areas that really caught my eye was the whole field of inverse physics or imaging. And two doctors at MASS General were using our graphics chips to do CT reconstruction. And it was during that time other types of techniques for general purpose computing was coming along, which ultimately led to what we now call cuda.
Guy Raz
All right, so let's jump into this, because you launched this project called CUDA or C U D A in roughly 2006. And to put this in very basic terms, CUDA is this platform that makes
Interviewer
your graphics chips a lot more versatile. Right. And originally you thought this would be
Guy Raz
great for scientists and researchers who had to process tons of data. But meantime, your customers were gamers, and
Interviewer
so they were getting these really sophisticated chips that.
Guy Raz
That they didn't really need or use. Right?
Jensen Huang
Yeah. And so you just go back to the inspiration that we had at the time, that it could be used for a whole bunch of other types of general purpose computation, Parallel computing, nature computation and image processing could be one of them. You know, there's a whole bunch of them in early experimentation, but none of that paid the bills. Most of those applications were in universities, and the researchers didn't buy too many of them to justify it. And so the only thing that really paid the bills was video games.
Interviewer
You understood that the GPU could do something. Lots of things, but that we just had not imagined those things yet.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, we knew of some things. And during that time, I was constantly looking for algorithms that required parallel computing. I was always looking for algorithms that somehow only ran on supercomputers, but if we could just figure out a way to bring it into a personal computer, its exposure or its ability to reach more people could be incredible. Constantly looking for things like that, I'm
Interviewer
trying to understand because basically from 2006 to 2012, your stock price was just either collapsing at times or wasn't moving. You had to refund hundreds of millions of dollars to people who didn't like the processors. And still there was this conviction in continuing down this path, this coup d' a path, because you and the people around you believed that there was something there, that you couldn't really know exactly what it was, but it was going to be something. So let's keep investing in this. And I'm trying to get into just this space of how you were dealing with, you know, you're a publicly traded company, your stock price was terrible, you probably had a lot of pressure from investors. What made you and the people that you worked with say, we're going to keep our heads down and keep going? Because it was a long time. We're talking six, seven, eight years on this thing that nobody understood and had zero, zero, but very little commercial success.
Jensen Huang
Well, that's when CEOs had to be CEOs. We believed on first principles this should be quite useful. And I had to believe that it's quite useful. Now the question is, what's the strategy for creating this new architecture for computing that everybody would be able to enjoy? And the problem with computer architectures is this chicken or the egg problem. Let's say you created a brand new architecture is incredible. It's the most amazing thing in the world. But computers are built to run software and if your install base is not large enough, it doesn't attract software developers because developers want to program on large install based computers like iPhone and PC. And so the problem is, even though we believed that this architecture was going to be incredible, that Cuda was going to be everywhere, or could be everywhere, how do you get it everywhere and you don't get it everywhere, how do you attract the developer? And if you had no developers, who would write the killer app? And if there's no killer app, then why would people buy it? And so the answer was very simple. It was literally sitting in front of us and it just required enormous sacrifice. The answer was, let's use GeForce, which is the GPU that is now everywhere in the world used for playing video games, and let's have GeForce carry on its back CUDA to every single computer in the world. Now, of course, by doing so, our gross Margins would go from bad to horrible. Okay, well, let's get past that. Let's not worry about the fact that our.
Interviewer
It's going to be years.
Jensen Huang
I know. Well, you never think that it's. Nobody ever thinks it's that long. And I thought it was going to be next year it's going to be okay, and the next year it's going to be okay, and next year it's going to be okay. But nonetheless, the cost was incredible in carrying Cuda and we couldn't charge anybody for it.
Interviewer
Right.
Jensen Huang
And so we gave it away. Meanwhile, we started up programs to reach out to every single university. We evangelized cuda. We flew everywhere around the world to pitch CUDA whenever you can. Meanwhile, G forces were taking Cuda out to the world.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
And so the hope was that someday some software company or some researcher or a lot of them eventually would know how to use Cuda and they would take advantage of it because it's sitting right there on GeForce.
Interviewer
Was there ever any thought in your mind that maybe we're too early? We might be the ones who actually make this revolutionary technology, but we might not be the ones to bring it to the promised land?
Jensen Huang
Yeah, all the time. But that's, you know, then there was 900 other smart strategies and, you know, the list of new ideas that we came up with to keep the company alive and successful for just another few more days. And it was countless. And so you're solving the problem both in making sure that you stay alive long enough to proliferate this technology everywhere, looking for every possible way, you're making it easier and easier for people to use this technology. You're teaching people to do it. You're talking to software developers and you're saying, hey, you know that imaging software that you had, maybe Photoshop for example, or some video imaging system for broadcast? Could we modify that so that it runs on cuda?
Interviewer
But were enough people adopting it to make it seem viable?
Jensen Huang
GeForce kept the lights on and just didn't do it very well. We were always under pressure because unlike other competitors, they didn't have to carry Cuda on its back. GeForce carried CUDA on its back for literally 25 years now.
Interviewer
And people were using this product and not even knowing what it could do.
Jensen Huang
Not one day. Yeah, it was just all sitting there, except for the scientists, except for researchers and universities that heard about CUDA and said, oh, all you have to do is go buy GeForce.
Guy Raz
But then at this point, I mean, everything was about to change for Nvidia because in the early 2010s, a group
Interviewer
of researchers in Toronto bought two Nvidia Gaming GPUs, right? Or GeForceS.
Guy Raz
They plugged them into a computer in a bedroom, and then they trained a neural network to recognize images way better than any computer had ever done before. And this was essentially the beginning of the AI boom. Right? So when you found out about that, what do you remember? I mean, do you remember thinking, this is what we've been waiting for for 15 years?
Jensen Huang
Well, at that time, several different groups reached out to us to ask us for help on using CUDA to accelerate deep learning. And the reason for that was because there was a contest coming up for computer vision called ImageNet, and they were all developing similar techniques. NITA wanted to use CUDA instead of using CPUs, which would have taken thousands of CPUs to.
Interviewer
CPU is one task at a time,
Jensen Huang
one task at a time. And they could use our GPUs, just a few GPUs, maybe a couple of them running simultaneously on CUDA, maybe they could train these deep learning models a lot faster and a lot more cost effectively. And so they reached out all at the same time. And the leap over previous generation algorithms were so significant, it really caught my eye. And so we asked ourselves, what is this thing about? And where can it go from here? What is the implication to our chips? What's the implication to computers? And so, like we do with everything, you know, reason about the. So what's. Which led to a lot of other good decisions.
Interviewer
It was a weekend, I guess, in 2013, where you sent a note out and essentially said, we're now an AI company. Like, Friday, you were focused on the gaming. I mean, because the majority of your business was still gaming. Maybe people who were doing 3D animation and doing graphics for films. That was a pretty significant source of your customer base. But now you are saying, well, we are becoming a different company.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. And the process kind of goes like what I was explaining earlier. As I do with everything, I break things down to first principles. And. And you ask yourself, what did I learn? Why is it impactful? What are the foundations of this technology that made it effective? Can it do more than this? How far can this algorithm go? What is the implication to our computer industry? So you just got to go through all of that. You know, it's no different than somebody writing a business plan about something. Except, you know, this is kind of how my brain's wired for almost everything. I'm good at connecting dots, good at system thinking. And, you know, I came to the conclusion that this. This could be a really significant future direction for the company. And long before I would send out an email that declares something, I had already through tens of engagements with different groups, each one of the groups have already been brought along. So by the time that I sent an email to. To the company, integrating everything, everybody's already been brought along. And so it just kind of tends to be my management style. But at some point, I will set a direction for the company.
Interviewer
I'm curious again about stress management and conviction. I wonder how you personally dealt with that. There were periods of time where you and obviously other people believe in the potential of this thing. Like, the capacity is gonna be enormous, but we just have to stay the course. And nothing is really moving for a while. I mean, it's gonna take a long time. But you don't know that. You don't have a crystal ball. I mean, are you just comfortable with that level of stress or. I mean, do you feel. Cause you don't strike me as somebody who was saying, we're gonna be the biggest company, we're gonna be the masters of.
Jensen Huang
Not going out of business is always high on my list.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. Showing up in life matters a lot. Showing up every single day matters a lot, Guy. I guess to me, it's not that complicated. There's a lot of unknowns, and being a CEO, you're dealing with mostly unknowns, and I'm very comfortable with unknowns. But the first thing you have to do is, to the best of your ability, reason about what it is that we're doing and what do we believe in? I deeply believed. And because I deeply believe it, I help everybody else believe it, and I really believe they believed it. And then, of course, we don't want to dedicate our lives to go work on something that the world already have. I don't want our company working on things to capture share from somebody. They built a market. We want to take their share. And so let's go and fight to the bitter end. And. And when your share point goes up by a point you celebrate with joy. I mean, I just don't find any joy in any.
Interviewer
That wasn't interesting. It was about going in a completely
Jensen Huang
different direction, pursuing something that's really, really hard. And I believe if it works, it would make such an extraordinary impact. It was not hard to stay the course. It would have been harder to give up. You know, I think that because you believe so deeply in something, it's already manifested fully in my head. I Imagine Everybody using it. GeForce has carried it to everybody's computer. Everybody has CUDA inside their PC. And so the question is not to me whether we would succeed. The only question is when and who is going to be the first application
Guy Raz
when we come back in just a moment, Nvidia becomes a major player on the world stage. And Jensen reflects on the future of AI and on his own reluctance to reflect on himself. Stay with us. I'm Guy Raz and you're listening to How I Built this. Hey, welcome back to How I Built this. I'm Guy raz. So it's 2013 and Nvidia is now pivoting away from making chips for gaming to making chips for AI. And as the technology takes off, Nvidia starts to soar right along with it. And I'm going to jump ahead to the part of the story that's familiar to all of us because we've all lived it. By 2022, ChatGPT and Claude start to transform the workplace. In our daily lives, massive data centers go up around the world and most of them are full of Nvidia chips. Nvidia becomes the biggest company in the world and has as much influence on world affairs as some countries, maybe most countries. But just to state the obvious here, a lot of that can feel kind of disconcerting.
Interviewer
You know, you're well aware of lots of people who have a lot of worry about this. I mean, Geoffrey Hinton, one of the earliest users of your GPUs to train these networks, they've signed letters saying, you know, there's a famous letter came out May of 2023 saying, look, to, quote, mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be global priority alongside other societal scale risks such as pandemics, nuclear war, signed by Bill Gates and Sam Altman and Dario and many, many others. You didn't sign this letter and you have been really clear that you are not worried about it. You think a lot of this is alarmism. A lot of the conversation around AI and how it's going to take over our jobs and can manipulate, you know, all kinds of things. Why do you think the people who are making those warnings wrong?
Jensen Huang
Yeah, I think the first thing that everybody should do is to take the science fiction and the Hollywood versions of artificial intelligence and set that aside and come back to a sensible understanding of what a computer is. It's computers, it's software, it is not conscious. Having said all that, I think we all, everybody wants the same thing, that the technology evolves in a safe Way, I am worried about it. And so the question is, how do you channel your worry?
Interviewer
What are you worried about?
Jensen Huang
Well, we have to build the technology safely. And so could you imagine if the auto industry every single day told you that the car is going to kill lots of people? It's their job to make the car safer, channel their worry towards making the car safer. I don't think it's helpful for the airline industry to tell you that every single day, if the plane fails, it would crash out of the sky. I think all of those narratives are
Interviewer
not helpful, but they're coming from the people who are making some of this technology.
Jensen Huang
I guess I've got a different perspective on why it is that they're doing that. Maybe it's because they want the world to realize the technology they invented was so powerful, it's a celebration of their own achievements. Maybe they are genuinely scared themselves and that they believe that only they can create a technology and keep it safe. Ignoring the fact that there are millions of innovators around the world who are thinking about AI safety, AI security, and building technology for AI safety and AI security. There were even attitudes that we ought to slow down AI innovation, which I believe is exactly the opposite. We had to speed up AI innovation because through innovation we can make the technology safer, more secure. And obviously it's proven to be true. The fact of the matter is the AI technology of today is more grounded on truth. It hallucinates less, it lies less, and all of that technology needed to be invented. And so my single greatest worry is that United States doesn't take advantage of the technology because we scared everybody.
Interviewer
What do you mean?
Jensen Huang
Right now, the sentiments for AI in the United States is lower than most
Interviewer
countries because the message is, it's going
Jensen Huang
to take your job, it's going to take your job, it's going to be existential threat, it's going to go into a singularity, and it'll be the end of the world.
Interviewer
Do you think that conversation's only happening here or by far, by far?
Jensen Huang
I travel the world by far in the west, it's really out of control. And I think we're doing ourselves a disservice. Let me give you an example. So a decade ago, somebody said, listen, the first profession that's going to be wiped out is radiology.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
And the reason for that is because the first model that was invented was used for computer vision. Computer vision would be trained to read radiology scans better than any humans can, and therefore no radiologist would be necessary. Well, it turns Out. They were absolutely right, 100% right. AI has now completely revolutionized radiology. Every single radiologist uses AI to study the scans. It does it incredibly fast, incredibly accurately, better than a human can. However, radiologists demand has gone up.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
The number of patients that we're able to take care of, the number of scans has now grown.
Interviewer
Because it's cheaper.
Jensen Huang
Because it's cheaper and faster. And therefore you want to do more scans so that you can do a better job diagnosing disease. What is fundamentally missed is that a job has a purpose and a task. The task is to study the radiology, the scans, but the purpose is to diagnose disease. Turns out hospitals are now seeing more patients, generating more revenues, which enables them to support more patients. And they need to hire more radiologists. Now, where's the harm? The harm could be that by well known experts declaring the end of an entire profession. Who's going to go into radiology? So young people who wanted to be in radiology decided that this profession is completely obsolete and therefore don't come in. What happens. The world doesn't have enough radiologists. As a result, we've brought harm.
Interviewer
So you're saying the conversation we're having here is very binary in the United States. Like we're saying it's going to be this or this. And so the argument you're making is that there's a lack of imagination. So for example, I've got a son who's going to go to college next year, right? And so a lot of the conversation is what are these kids going to do in five years? Or what are the jobs going to be? I mean, if law firms are using AI for discovery, if consulting firms are using AI for what an entry level job would be, if finance firms, et cetera, et cetera, would you argue that that's a lack of imagination, that we actually are reaching those conclusions because we can't think beyond that scenario?
Jensen Huang
Partly, I believe the opportunities, the potential for a new college grad in computer science or computer engineering or software engineering or chip design today is far, far greater than the opportunities and potential. When I came out of school, the tools they have to work with is a billion times more capable. It's super highly automated already today, and yet they're busier than ever. And the reason for that is because we have ideas of the things that we want to build that we didn't conceive of at the time. Without the tools that we have, AI is going to help this next generation of new college grads achieve greater Things, build greater things. Not take their jobs for us to scare them into. Not even wanting to go to college. Okay. Not even wanting to be a computer scientist is a disservice to the society. You're not saving anybody. You're talking a whole bunch of people out of professions that we need in the future.
Interviewer
And that conversation is not happening in China.
Jensen Huang
They're not buying it. They're just not buying it. For me, the most harmful thing we could do to our society, our closest families, is to scare everybody so that we don't benefit in the next several decades. The other countries will. We can't allow that to happen.
Interviewer
Do you think that there is a possibility that in 10 years from now, Nvidia will have an order of magnitude more employees?
Jensen Huang
Before AI or after AI? I don't think it would make any difference. The difference is that with AI, along with my employees, we're going to have hundreds, thousands of AI assistants helping them, doing amazing things. And so our expectations of our company will be different.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
Things that take 10 years, I think will take one year. And so is that good or bad? It's thrilling. It's exhilarating, I think.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
There's just so much of the universe that we don't understand. For the first time in history, we have the technology to do so. We will do in the next several decades what it took humanity several hundred years to achieve.
Interviewer
Well, as a dad of two boys, I hope you're right.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, I expect to be.
Interviewer
I know that you don't like to talk about speculation, but I read an excerpt from a new book that's coming out. It's called Defending Taiwan by a writer named Ache Freeman. And he paints a scenario of a possible conflict, hot conflict, where all of a sudden Taiwan is somehow invaded or occupied, whatever you want to call it.
Guy Raz
Right.
Interviewer
And we've seen what, you know, we've got some challenges geopolitically. Right. I mean, what part of that. Let's just say that scenario is not realistic, that it would be destructive for China as well because their economy really depends on the US Market? Does any part of the fact that such a high percentage of advanced chips, not just Nvidia but advanced chips, are produced in Taiwan, is any part of that? Should people be concerned about that at all?
Jensen Huang
We should always have a resilient supply chain. That's part of building a strong company. And a resilient supply chain has diversity and redundancy, but sometimes you don't have the benefit of diversity and redundancy. So you make the best you Can. I think there are a lot of conflated questions that are put into that concern. If you ask me, am I concerned about a hot conflict? I'm less concerned than most, but depending on the actions of the leaders, we may cause the hot conflict. And so I am of the opinion that we all must be more long term minded if we can. We ought to have a more balanced and nuanced set of policies. Not all or nothing. Don't push your adversaries, don't push your competitors to the wall where they have no choice or where there's no cost to a strategic alternative. And so I think that you know, in your question, do I believe it? The answer is I don't. Because I, I believe can it happen? Of course it can happen everywhere, obviously. However, I believe in the wisdom of the people involved.
Interviewer
What have you had to unlearn as a leader? The bigger this company has gotten and the more experience you've gotten. I mean you are known for being hard, demanding, hard charging. You demand the best out of people. You have yelled at people all those things. Would you say those things are still how you manage or have you unlearned some of those things or have you changed some of those things in your style?
Jensen Huang
I don't think people care about style. I think people care about your values and what you care about. So long as you're tough on the same things every time it comes up. So long as the moment that it's over, it's over and they know that they're safe. You love them, you want them to succeed, this is their life's work and you want it to be as good as it can be. Everybody knows that I have enough of everything. Whatever it is that anybody thinks they need more of, I've got plenty of it. And yet I work harder than ever. And the reason for that is because I want everything that I have, they have, I want them to see, to realize their dreams. So long as you're pure and high integrity and completely there for them. You could be quite challenging to people and they know that you're on their side.
Interviewer
You have been on the record as basically saying you've been asked, would you do this again? Would you do this all over again? And I'm sort of paraphrasing what do you said? A version of no, I wouldn't do
Jensen Huang
it again, no way. Yeah.
Interviewer
So can you explain that? I mean, we sort of have the outlines of all of the troughs and there were a lot of troughs. And I'm trying to even imagine like quarterly ends rough. I'm trying to imagine quarterly earning calls in 2007 when your stock price is in the toilet and you're putting.
Jensen Huang
I gotta tell you, it's embarrassing.
Interviewer
I'm trying to figure out how you can do that as a publicly traded company, withstand the pressure and as you say, the embarrassment.
Jensen Huang
It was embarrassing. It was humiliating. You're the only face that everybody hates. Your employees are probably embarrassed for you. Your question about doing it again, you know, most people, I just think they're being dishonest. So let me just tell you why. When somebody asks me, would I do this again? If your question is knowing how Nvidia turned out.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
Knowing the contribution we've made to the world, knowing the consequence of the company today, how it impacts so many different industries, all of the benefits that we have accrued as a result of our success. Do I love those things? The answer is yes. But that wasn't the question. You know, the question is, suppose I knew everything then, that I now know how hard it is and all of the pain and suffering and all the embarrassment and humiliation and all the setbacks and you compress all of that. And you just told that 30 year old kid, listen, this is going to take a lot longer than you think. However fast you thought your company was going to be successful, it's not going to be anything like that. And you are going to be the person who delivers most of the most horrific financial return news that anybody's ever explained. You know, so on and so forth. You'll be going out of business. You have to lay people off. Would you start again? The answer, absolutely not. And so I think a lot of people forget that the pain and suffering necessary, the endurance necessary to do something great is because you're always looking forward and forgetting the past. Yeah, I spent one all my time forgetting yesterday. In fact, you know, right now as we're talking, it is really quite hard for me to resurface those memories and resurface those feelings. And the reason for that is I spend all of my time, all of my life trying to forget yesterday.
Interviewer
Right.
Jensen Huang
So that you can get back on that horse. That's in fact. What do they teach athletes Forget the last point. Yeah, it's about forgetting.
Interviewer
Yeah, I understand. I mean, the sacrifice, right? I mean you've got a family like you probably missed a lot of things. You probably did 12 hour days, seven days a week for years. And after you sort of really began to focus on AI, it doubled again. I mean it was, it was all those things all True.
Jensen Huang
All true. And during the time when the kids were still young, I was finishing my master's at Stanford and so I was busy on multiple levels. And yeah, I missed all their karate tournaments. I missed a lot. I missed a lot. I don't know that I've ever asked them what it was like on the receiving side of it, but if you're going to build a company, you need somebody strong and you need somebody amazing like my wife. And she took care of everything. Lori took care of everything. And I don't remember complaining even one time, one nanosecond or even one instance. That's the gift that she gave me. And both kids love Nvidia to their
Interviewer
core and both work here, both work here.
Jensen Huang
They both went off in their own careers for a while and we were lucky to attract them back. And both kids have read every shareholder letter, gone to every shareholder meeting, been to every single conference that I've ever done. I've missed most of theirs. They've been to all of mine. And Spencer's 35, Madison's 34, and the company's 33 years old. And that kind of puts it in perspective. I mean, they've had Nvidia in their lives the whole time. And despite the fact that I was gone a lot, they found a way to always love the company. And I'm really lucky.
Interviewer
Your story to me is just, it's a story of pressure. Right. And now it's like, you know, you did not intend or anticipate that this was going to be the company. It is. Its importance is global and that's a lot of responsibility.
Jensen Huang
Yeah. And humility is helpful. Yeah. Being grounded is helpful. Not doing this job from a yacht is helpful.
Interviewer
Yeah.
Jensen Huang
And the fact that the company was built stone by stone, you know, with the people that are here, everybody's so grounded. I think it's helpful. You also have to realize that the company also evolved over 30 years. You know it recently, but this is one of the oldest technology companies in the world.
Interviewer
I know that we have talked a lot about you and your life, but the guy who wrote a biography of you and Nvidia, Steven Witt, said you were one of the most challenging people to report on because you generally don't like to talk about yourself.
Jensen Huang
Great reservation. Doing so. Yes.
Interviewer
And I wonder, is that because you just find it to be self aggrandizing or, I don't know, just you find it to be being self reflective? I mean, going back to what you said about forgetting everything that happened and just moving forward Is that part of it? Is it that you don't. I notice that when you talk about your kids or even your parents and the struggle, sacrifice they make you do, you know, get a little bit emotional. And I wonder whether part of not liking to talk about yourself is maybe some of that.
Jensen Huang
Yeah, even that. That's a hard question. Why don't I like talking about myself? I didn't do anything by myself. I was fortunate to have two amazing, amazing friends, Chris and Curtis. I'm surrounded by amazing computer scientists here. I made a lot of good decisions. I've made a large number of lesser good decisions. I just don't find any of that to be very special or that interesting. It's just not. It's not the way I'm built, you know? The way I'm built is you put me in crisis. All right? The perfect day is we are in trouble, and you just create the worst possible condition. And, Jensen, you need. We need you to come and help us think through this. That's my perfect. That's my vibe. Battlefield. I'm a Battlefield CEO, and so I. I think I'm just uncomfortable talking about it. Maybe. I don't know why, guy. I don't know why. Maybe I need therapy, you know, to help me figure it out.
Interviewer
Have you had it before?
Jensen Huang
No. No. This is as close as I come.
Interviewer
You don't strike me as. I mean, you talked about your dad.
Jensen Huang
This is as close as it comes.
Interviewer
Your dad's 88, right, and he's retired. And so you strike me as, you know, that it sort of moved forward. And maybe your dad also, like, you know, isn't sort of looking back on his life wistfully, he's, I'm sure, proud of you. And maybe some of that comes from there. Would you say that all of those things you mentioned, the people you met and the decisions that were made, the good decisions and the bad ones and the grind and the result now the most. I mean, you hear it a million times, and it's probably still crazy to hear it. The most valuable company in the world, right? I mean, the value of this company is bigger than most countries by far. Do you think that that happened because of all of those elements? All the people, the hard work, the grind? Or do you think that luck played a bigger role?
Jensen Huang
Several hundred forks in the road in a lifetime, I've largely taken the right one. Combination of good judgment, good values, good friends, informed decisions, critical thinking, and some dose of luck led me to choosing the best of several options. And when I didn't when the company didn't choose the best options, we created a system that allowed it to self reflect, to not be so hard on ourselves from making a bad decision that we can quickly adjust and not let the bad decision be fatal. But I think that in the end, the secret to it all, you know, the only thing I've really learned about it all is that the next fork in a road is about to come and the people that are going to help me make the best decisions likely will be different than the ones that helped me make the last decisions. And I've always felt safe making strategic decisions. I've always felt safe taking risks. Maybe it's because I know that when I get home, Lori's still there. You know, maybe it's because when I get home, I know the kids are there. Maybe I know that all of our employees are going to be here. Maybe that's as complicated as it is. I wish I could be more technical in explaining how companies are built and run, but I built this one from the first day. And it's much more personal. I frankly believe, you know, because people say it's not business, it's personal. It's always personal.
Guy Raz
That's Jensen Huang, co founder and CEO of Nvidia. And yes, during our interview, he was wearing his signature black leather jacket, black T shirt, black jeans, black belt and black shoes. It's what he wears daily. He says it makes his life simpler. It's one less decision he has to think about each day. Hey, thanks so much for listening to the show this week. Please make sure to click the Follow button on your podcast app so you never miss a new episode of the show. And if you're interested in insights, ideas and lessons from some of the world's greatest entrepreneurs, please do sign up for my newsletter@guyraz.com or on substack. This episode was researched and produced by Alex Chung, with music composed by Ramtin Arablouei. It was edited by Neva Grant. Our engineers are Patrick Murray and Robert Rodriguez. Our production staff also includes Casey Herman, Chris Masini, Jacey Howard, Kathryn Seifer, Kerry Thompson, Carla Estevez, Sam Paulson, John Isabella, and Elaine Coates. I'm Guy Raz, and you've been listening to How I Built this.
In this compelling episode, Guy Raz sits down with Jensen Huang at NVIDIA’s headquarters for a sweeping conversation spanning Huang’s childhood, the rocky early years of NVIDIA, and how a series of bold bets—often under existential threat—catapulted the company from near bankruptcy to the very center of the global AI revolution. Huang discusses pivotal moments of self-doubt, the engineering and management challenges that shaped him, and his outlook on AI’s risks and opportunities. The episode is candid, emotional, and filled with practical wisdom for innovators, leaders, and anyone curious about how iconic companies survive—and thrive—against all odds.
(08:04 – 12:42)
Boarding School in Kentucky:
Jensen describes arriving in the U.S. at age nine, attending Oneida Baptist Institute, a boarding school in rural Kentucky, cleaning bathrooms to pay tuition, sharing a room with a 16-year-old.
"I was nine when I went there... My job was to clean the bathrooms. Apparently, I was the youngest kid that ever went there." (08:04 Jensen Huang)
Family Sacrifice:
His family was separated for nearly two years due to finances, communicating only through taped messages.
"We would record what happened this last month... all the food was in boxes and it was McDonald's." (09:15 Jensen Huang)
(10:01 – 15:24)
Oregon State:
Majored in electrical engineering when computer science wasn't an option.
"All of my best friends were in two clubs—the math club and the computer club... it was the same four kids." (10:40 Jensen Huang)
First Industry Experience:
Worked at AMD, then LSI Logic, learning chip design hands-on just as software-based design was emerging.
"I was the last generation of chip designers that did it by hand, and the first that used software." (12:08 Jensen Huang)
(15:06 – 22:39)
Origin Story:
Co-founders Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem recruited him to build affordable graphics for PCs, inspired by the Jurassic Park era of computer graphics.
"Nvidia manifested in my mind... so crystal clear. Never once did it cross my mind it wouldn't work out." (17:05 Jensen Huang)
NV1 Disaster and Crisis:
Their first chip (NV1) flopped technically and commercially; competitors did it better, and their Sega contract was at risk.
"We sold 250,000 [chips]... and I believe you can sell 250,000 of almost anything. But the algorithm didn't really work... we received 250,000 back." (18:37 Jensen Huang)
Sega Pivot:
Jensen courageously asked Sega to convert their $5M contract into an investment to avoid bankruptcy.
"My first job as CEO is to make sure we don't go out of business... and if you could help me with this, I think it’s going to be a great investment." (21:09 Jensen Huang)
Memorable Moment:
Laid off two-thirds of staff to save the company (22:32), an intensely painful decision that preserved NVIDIA’s chances.
(22:48 – 38:29)
Survival through Invention:
Used half of their remaining money to buy an emulator from a liquidated company—an untested, risky move that ultimately paid off.
"We took half of our company's money... bought this machine that nobody else wanted to buy..." (25:00 Jensen Huang)
Culture of Disruption:
Inspired by Clayton Christensen’s Innovator’s Dilemma.
"The single most important thing about technology is the moment it becomes good enough... it's about disruption." (30:55 Jensen Huang)
Birth of CUDA and the Long March:
Massive investment in CUDA (2006) transformed GPUs from gaming chips to general-purpose parallel processors, but for years, no one outside academia really used them.
"The answer was, let’s use GeForce... and let’s have GeForce carry on its back CUDA to every single computer in the world... Our gross margins would go from bad to horrible." (38:12 Jensen Huang)
(39:01 – 43:56)
AI’s “Slot Machine” Moment:
Everything changed when researchers used gaming GPUs to win the ImageNet contest, catalyzing the deep learning revolution.
"We are now an AI company... you ask yourself, what did I learn? Why is it impactful?... This could be a really significant future direction for the company." (42:44 Jensen Huang)
Conviction in the Face of Doubt:
"Not going out of business is always high on my list. Showing up in life matters a lot... It was not hard to stay the course. It would have been harder to give up." (44:39 Jensen Huang)
(47:42 – 55:26)
On AI Alarmism:
Jensen pushes back on doomsday narratives, advocating for innovation and practical safety efforts rather than fear-mongering.
"Take the science fiction and the Hollywood versions of artificial intelligence and set that aside... it is not conscious." (48:32 Jensen Huang)
AI and the Future of Work:
His view is that AI will augment, not replace, most professions—radiologists, for example, are busier, not obsolete.
"AI has now completely revolutionized radiology... and they need to hire more radiologists." (51:58 Jensen Huang)
Global Perspective:
Warns that U.S. fear of AI risks ceding advantage to countries like China.
"The most harmful thing we could do to our society... is to scare everybody so that we don’t benefit in the next decades. The other countries will." (54:33 Jensen Huang)
(58:01 – 65:08)
Leadership Evolution:
Values “being tough on the same things every time”, showing belief in people, and being “completely there for them.”
"It's always personal... So long as you're pure and high integrity... you could be quite challenging to people and they know you're on their side." (58:29 Jensen Huang)
Sacrifice & Regret:
Candid about the loneliness and toll of building NVIDIA—would not do it again if he knew the pain involved.
"It was embarrassing. It was humiliating... Suppose I knew everything then that I now know... would you start again? The answer: absolutely not." (60:00/60:26 Jensen Huang)
On Family:
His wife, Lori, was the bedrock. He missed many years with his kids, but they retained deep loyalty to NVIDIA.
"She took care of everything... Both kids have read every shareholder letter, gone to every meeting, been to every conference... I've missed most of theirs, they've been to all of mine." (63:18 Jensen Huang)
(56:44 – 67:47)
Geopolitical Risks:
Views on reliance on Taiwanese chip manufacturing—importance of resilience, caution on hot conflict scenarios.
"We should always have a resilient supply chain... I believe in the wisdom of the people involved." (56:44/58:01 Jensen Huang)
Luck, Judgment & Building a Company:
Attributes NVIDIA’s survival to changing course when needed, surrounding himself with great people, and relentless forward focus.
"I've largely taken the right [forks in the road]... Combination of good judgment, good values, good friends, informed decisions... and some dose of luck." (67:47 Jensen Huang)
On Perseverance:
"The only face that everybody hates. Your employees are probably embarrassed for you... The pain and suffering necessary to do something great is because you’re always looking forward and forgetting the past."
— Jensen Huang (60:00–62:04)
Refusing to Give Up:
"I spent all my time forgetting yesterday. In fact, right now as we’re talking, it is really quite hard for me to resurface those memories."
— Jensen Huang (62:05)
On Leadership Style:
"I don’t think people care about style. I think people care about your values and what you care about... So long as you're pure and high integrity and completely there for them..."
— Jensen Huang (58:29)
On AI and Resisting Alarmism:
"I think we all, everybody wants the same thing, that the technology evolves in a safe way. I am worried about it... But all of those narratives are not helpful."
— Jensen Huang (48:32–49:35)
On the Secret to Survival:
"The secret to it all: the next fork in the road is about to come... and the people that are going to help me make the best decisions likely will be different than the ones that helped me make the last decisions."
— Jensen Huang (67:47)
The conversation is equal parts humble, technical, emotional, and philosophical. Huang speaks with characteristic precision, humility, and grit, never shying from failures or mistakes—always returning to first principles, ethics, and the primacy of “showing up every day.”
This episode stands as a master-class in resilience, technological risk-taking, and principled leadership. It’s a rare look into the mind—and heart—of one of tech’s most significant but least self-aggrandizing founders.
Recommended for: Entrepreneurs, product-builders, anyone wrestling with existential risk, and those interested in the real story behind the “overnight success” of today’s AI revolution.