logo
Nvidia taps two young Chinese AI experts to strengthen research

Nvidia taps two young Chinese AI experts to strengthen research

US chip giant
Nvidia has hired two prominent
artificial intelligence (AI) experts who hail from China, underscoring the rising global recognition of talent from the mainland and their key contributions to the field's advancement.
Zhu Banghua and Jiao Jiantao, both alumni of China's Tsinghua University, said on their respective social media accounts that they joined Nvidia, sharing photos of themselves with Jensen Huang, the founder and CEO of the company.
Zhu, who received his bachelor's degree in electrical and electronics engineering from Tsinghua in 2018 and a PhD in electrical engineering and computer science from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2024, joined Nvidia's Nemotron team as a principal research scientist, according to Zhu's post on X from over the weekend.
Zhu's LinkedIn profile showed that he has also been an assistant professor at the University of Washington since September 2024.
'We'll be joining forces on efforts in [AI] model post-training, evaluation, agents, and building better AI infrastructure – with a strong emphasis on collaboration with developers and academia,' Zhu said, adding that the team was committed to open-sourcing its work and sharing it with the world.
Nemotron is a group at Nvidia dedicated to building enterprise-level AI agents, according to the team's official website. The team's Nemotron multimodal models power AI agents for sophisticated text and visual reasoning, coding and tool-use capabilities.
Jiao, who received a PhD in electrical, electronics and communications in engineering from Stanford University in 2018 after graduating from Tsinghua with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering, said on LinkedIn over the weekend that he joined Nvidia to 'help push the frontier of artificial general intelligence (AGI) and artificial super intelligence (ASI).'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chinese stocks to stagnate in second half on lack of catalysts, top brokerages say
Chinese stocks to stagnate in second half on lack of catalysts, top brokerages say

South China Morning Post

time39 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Chinese stocks to stagnate in second half on lack of catalysts, top brokerages say

Chinese stocks are likely to tread water in the second half as investors refrain from big bets amid a lack of fresh catalysts, according to the nation's top-ranked brokerages. A deflationary trend and sluggish earnings growth will continue to weigh on yuan-denominated stocks , but state intervention and an economic recovery – albeit weak – will put a floor under the market, according to GF Securities, Industrial Securities and Shenwan Hongyuan Group. China's benchmark CSI 300 Index barely budged in the first half, as investors waited for more policy signals from Beijing to bolster growth and watched the trade talks with the US for positive signs. Meanwhile, the economic recovery was uneven, with retail sales rebounding on a trade-in programme for household appliances, exports holding up on front-loading, and woes lingering in the property market. The yield on the 10-year government bond fell to a record low of 1.597 per cent in January on expectations of interest-rate cuts by the central bank. 'While borrowing costs are falling and liquidity is ample, whether it can trigger a valuation expansion still depends on the fundamentals,' said Liu Chenming, an analyst at GF Securities in Beijing . 'For now, stocks are fairly valued.' The caution contrasts with global investment banks' relatively upbeat views on Hong Kong stocks , which they said would benefit from interest-rate reductions by the Federal Reserve and a reallocation of capital seeking to diversify away from US assets. The Hang Seng Index rose 20 per cent in the first half. GF Securities, Industrial Securities and Shenwan Hongyuan were ranked among mainland China's top four brokerages in the equity strategy category by New Fortune magazine last year.

AirPod maker Luxshare plans IPO deal as Hong Kong listing pipeline swells
AirPod maker Luxshare plans IPO deal as Hong Kong listing pipeline swells

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

AirPod maker Luxshare plans IPO deal as Hong Kong listing pipeline swells

Luxshare Precision Industry, which supplies Apple's AirPods and some iPhone models, plans to sell new shares in Hong Kong in what could be one of the 10 biggest tech listings this year after Beijing opened the door for more companies to raise capital offshore. The Shenzhen-listed firm said its listing plan was to improve overseas financing capabilities and accelerate global expansion, according to its exchange filing on Thursday. The firm is said to be seeking more than US$1 billion from its stock offering later this year, according to a Bloomberg report on the same day. The first-time offering in Hong Kong would not alter Luxshare's leadership structure or change its controlling shareholders and beneficial owners, according to the filing. At least 16 onshore industry peers have similar Hong Kong listing plans amid appetite from global funds seeking to diversify from US dollar assets, including Apple supplier Lens Technology, smartphone maker Shanghai Longcheer Technology and semiconductor designer OmniVision Integrated Circuits, according to Huatai Securities. Hong Kong hosted some of the biggest global tech listings this year. EV battery king Contemporary Amperex (US$5.2 billion), drug maker Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals (US$1.26 billion), condiment producer Foshan Haitian Flavouring & Food (US$1.3 billion), and Zhejiang Sanhua Intelligent Controls (US$1.2 billion) topped the billion-dollar deals. Play Sales grew 16 per cent in 2024 to 268.8 billion yuan, while earnings jumped 22 per cent to 13.37 billion yuan, its annual report showed. Apple, one of the so-called Magnificent Seven US tech stocks, is believed to be its single largest customer, accounting for almost 71 per cent of its annual revenue.

China schools urge pupils to dance when studying to boost brains, morale, ease pressure
China schools urge pupils to dance when studying to boost brains, morale, ease pressure

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

China schools urge pupils to dance when studying to boost brains, morale, ease pressure

Secondary schools in China have urged pupils to dance while studying in a bid to activate their brains, boost morale and relieve heavy academic pressure. Several schools across the nation have applied the 'passionate morning reading' method with their pupils. In video clips posted online, teenagers can be seen wiggling their bodies and waving their arms wildly while reading textbooks. In some schools, pupils stand still while studying but are encouraged to chant the text loudly. One pupil said on social media that the 'passionate morning reading method' ruined her voice. Photo: The activity lasts the whole morning study session, which usually lasts half an hour.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store