AI Styling Studio — Infinite avatar looks from just 1 photo.Try it now.

BestAITools

Submit your Tool

8000+ AI tools already listed
8K+Tools
100K+/moViews
25K+/moVisitors

AI NewsNvidia posts another record quarter, reveals $43B of holdings in startups

Nvidia posts another record quarter, reveals $43B of holdings in startups

6:53 AM IST · May 21, 2026

Nvidia posts another record quarter, reveals $43B of holdings in startups

Nvidia announced another record revenue figure after market close on Wednesday, reporting financial results for the quarter ending April 26. Over those three months, the company brought in $81.6 billion in revenue (up 20% from the previous quarter) and a record $75.2 billion in data center revenue. On the strength of that revenue, the company is authorizing $80 billion in share repurchases. “Our Blackwell architecture is everywhere, adopted and deployed by every major hyperscaler, every cloud provider, and every major model maker,” said Nvidia CFO Colette Kress. Notably, Nvidia did project a slowdown in revenue growth, forecasting $91 billion in revenue for the next quarter, which will be 12% growth. Chinese exports did not make any significant impact on the company’s earnings. While H200s have been approved for U.S. export, “we have yet to generate any revenue, and we are uncertain whether any imports will be allowed into [China],” Kress said. One surprise was the sheer volume of Nvidia’s stakes in privately held companies (listed in the filing as “non-marketable equity securities”), which nearly doubled between January and April. The company began the quarter with $22 billion in privately held stakes, but ended with $43 billion, driven primarily by $18.5 billion in purchases over the course of the quarter. The previous quarter had seen only $649 million of equivalent purchases. Notably, that figure does not include Nvidia’s recent investment in publicly traded companies like Corning and IREN, nor does it reflect future commitments that have not yet closed. Nvidia committed to investing $30 billion in OpenAI in February, although the precise structure of the deal was not disclosed. On a call discussing the results, Jensen Huang emphasized the broad scope of Nvidia’s impact, including a pending buildout with Anthropic. “The amount of capacity we’re going to bring online for Anthropic this year and next year is going to be quite significant,” Huang told investors on a call. “Our coverage for Anthropic had been largely zero until this.”

read more

Latest AI News

View All News →
Rocket engine startup Impulse raises $500 million to hire people, not AI

Rocket engine startup Impulse raises $500 million to hire people, not AI

Impulse Space, a startup founded by SpaceX engine guru Tom Mueller to build highly-maneuverable spacecraft, announced a $500 million Series D this week that it will use to hire as many as 200 new employees. The round, led by 137 Ventures and BANNER VC, with participation from Founders Fund, Lux Capital, and Linse Capital, reflects investor interest in space and defense tech as the U.S. government hurls cash at national security problems and SpaceX gears up for its IPO. Impulse is focused on in-space mobility. The company has developed a highly maneuverable platform called Mira that is targeted at U.S. Space Force buyers. It’s also building Helios, a vehicle designed to carry satellites rapidly to high orbits after they are dropped off in space closer to Earth. President and COO Eric Romo told TechCrunch that the new capital will help the company build and test more space vehicles and emphasized the company’s hiring plans at a time when aerospace talent is in high demand. While the company’s software teams are adopting AI coding tools, Romo said that when it comes to solving engineering problems in the real world, deep learning models aren’t quite ready for prime time. As the 13th employee at SpaceX back in 2003, Romo’s job was creating computer simulations of the company’s engine design to assess its performance. “I considered it success if I got within 20% of the right answer, because the simulations were just not that good,” Romo said. “They’ve improved, but they’ve not improved that much, and so there’s not really any substitute for designing the thing, analyzing the thing, building it, and then getting it on the test stand.” Romo suspects AI tools for hardware design may be slower to arrive because the right training data is hard to find, compared to the amount of text and code available on the internet to train LLMs. “If you want to go, say, find the best designs for a turbo pump seal package in the world, you’re not going to find those online,” he points out. Impulse started with a focus on propulsion and evolved to build spacecraft, requiring the company to add more expertise in the form of engineers who build vehicle structures and flight computers. One reason the company recently opened an office in Colorado is that aerospace talent has more options today — instead of just going to Los Angeles, engineers can find work in Seattle, Denver, or Texas. Next up for the company is another launch of its Mira spacecraft, which made its third flight late last year. That flight wasn’t without incident — a problem with its navigation system led it to expend much of its propellant early on. Romo said the company is prepping a new Mira mission that is expected to launch before the end of the year.

22 minutes ago

View

ZeroDrift raises $10M to protect AI models from themselves

ZeroDrift raises $10M to protect AI models from themselves

As enterprises troubleshoot their AI systems, governance has emerged as a key challenge. Some are taking a dual approach: One model to handle incoming queries, and another to keep the first one from getting into trouble. That’s the premise ofZeroDrift, a new AI compliance service that on Tuesday said it had raised $10 million in a seed funding round that saw investments from a16z Speedrun, Reign Ventures, PitchDrive Ventures, and U&I Ventures, among others. The company deals entirely with the second part of the system, sitting between AI models and end users to flag and replace any messages that might present a compliance problem. It might seem strange to build an AI tool to correct other AI systems’ mistakes, but ZeroDrift says its system has a few architectural advantages over the models it will be correcting. The system is triggered by conventional programs that deterministically apply known compliance standards like SOC 2 or GDPR, and the LLM only comes into play once a message has been flagged, rewriting a compliant version of the same message. “We’re able to identify, deterministically, what are all the regulated areas, what’s the violation that’s being broken, and then we have LLMs that can do the rewrites,” CEO Kumesh Aroomoogan says. Critically, the company says its entire system can be run with lower latency and more reliability than a conventional LLM. This is what ZeroDrift touts as its primary advantage over big labs like OpenAI and Anthropic, which are often already present in the underlying system. The most obvious use case is for AI chatbots, which are already deployed in front of consumers where there can be serious consequences for rogue answers. But Aroomoogan sees a much larger total addressable market, potentially spanning AI-generated messages that are generated only within automated systems that humans will never see. So far, it’s a relatively small market, but it’s one that will grow as AI proliferates. If the fundraise is any indication, there’s a lot of pent-up demand for such products. “It was probably the fastest fundraising I’ve done in my life,” Aroomoogan says, crediting Andressen Horowitz for helping structure the seed round. “We closed within three weeks, and we will be oversubscribed by 3x on the amount.”

22 minutes ago

View

Cricketer KL Rahul Partners With str8bat to Launch AI-Powered Batting Platform

Cricketer KL Rahul Partners With str8bat to Launch AI-Powered Batting Platform

The partnership brings KL Rahul’s batting philosophy to str8bat’s AI platform allowing players to learn from professional-level insights tailored to their game.

22 minutes ago

View

Coforge Launches Nexa Agentic Platform for Insurers

Coforge Launches Nexa Agentic Platform for Insurers

Nexa aims to automate and streamline underwriting, claims processing, product development and modernisation of legacy systems.

23 minutes ago

View