The Tech Download: Agentic tools and chips take center stage at Nvidia’s ‘Super Bowl of AI’


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Nvidia’s yearly showcase event — dubbed the ‘Super Bowl of AI’ by some — kicked off at the start of the week to much fanfare across the tech sector. The event sees tens of thousands of attendees gather in California to get the latest on the world’s most valuable company’s plans for the future.

Didn’t manage to snag a ticket? No problem. I caught up with CNBC’s Katie Tarasov, who was on the ground at the event, to get a sense of what went down.

Jensen Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks during a news conference at the Nvidia GTC conference in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, March 17, 2026.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Kai: What were the key announcements this year?

Katie: I’m always watching for the biggest hardware announcements because it’s Nvidia chips that are filling AI data centers and powering almost every major company’s AI ambitions. We saw two big new chip announcements during CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote on Monday.

First was an entirely new type of chip called a Language Processing Unit, or LPU. It’s the first chip Nvidia’s unveiling using technology it acquired from chip startup Groq in December. That $20 billion deal was Nvidia’s biggest purchase ever. While Nvidia’s star graphics processing units have thousands of cores that perform many operations simultaneously, the Groq 3 LPU is built with a single core optimized for speeding up those GPUs.

The other big chip announcement was the unveiling of a rack filled entirely with Nvidia’s newest Vera central processing units, or CPUs. I wrote a piece last week explaining how the CPU is having a renaissance as Nvidia sees it as a coming bottleneck for agentic AI, which requires more data transfer and general-purpose compute typically handled by the CPU.

And one software mention that stood out: Nvidia announced NemoClaw, an enterprise-level version of OpenClaw that layers Nvidia’s software stack on top of the autonomous AI agent platform.

Kai: What stood out about the Nvidia GTC 2026 conference? 

Kai: Why has Nvidia’s stock dropped slightly in the past few days?

Kai: What did we learn about Nvidia’s plans for the future from the conference?

Katie: Overall, I think we’re seeing Nvidia shift its strategy to align with changing compute needs as agentic AI takes off. Instead of putting all its eggs in the GPU basket, Nvidia’s taking a more “soup-to-nuts” strategy, as Creative Strategies analyst Ben Bajarin put it to me.

But Huang also showed a sneak peak of what’s next for its most buzz-worthy line: the Kyber rack-scale architecture. It will integrate 144 GPUs in compute trays that sit vertically instead of horizontally in order to boost density and lower latency. The Kyber design will be available in Vera Rubin Ultra, Nvidia’s next rack-scale system, expected to ship in 2027.

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The Tech Download: Agentic tools and chips take center stage at Nvidia’s ‘Super Bowl of AI’

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