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Alcaraz claims year-end No. 1; Sinner shines & #NextGenATP stars surge – ATP Tour
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Nvidia’s Jensen Huang says ‘to be a CEO is a lifetime of sacrifice,’ but his parents prepared him for the ‘pain and suffering’ of leadership
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says that leading a company like chipmaker Nvidia is a privilege but it also requires an individual to sacrifice their life to be of service to the business and its employees.
Huang, worth $165 billion according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, recently gave a talk to students at the University of Cambridge, in which he described how his parents’ pursuit of success in the U.S. laid the foundation for his work ethic in building his own company. Huang, along with two friends, founded Nvidia in 1993 and over the past two decades has grown the business to a market cap of more than $4.6 trillion.
He launched Nvidia from a Denny’s dining booth without a business plan, he said, and had to learn his leadership and management skills on the job. After all, Nvidia is the first and only business he has ever led.
His mantra for success has been simple: “Don’t get bored and don’t get fired,” he said at the event earlier this month.
While that sounds straightforward enough, Huang also warned a life of extreme success in a highly competitive industry like tech is not without its drawbacks.
When discussing why he, as opposed to his engineer co-founders Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem, landed the top job, Huang said it was because “they didn’t want the job.”
“In retrospect, I could have been smarter myself, and to be CEO is a lifetime of sacrifice,” Huang told his audience. “Most people think that it’s about leading and being in command and being on top. None of that is true. You’re in service of the company. You’re creating conditions for other people to do their life’s work, you’re inspiring through example. Most of the examples are making difficult decisions during very difficult times, it’s mostly about sacrifiice.”
“It’s about strategy, and strategy … is not just about choosing what to do, it’s about choosing what not to do, which is sacrifice, and the determination, the conviction, the pain and suffering that goes along with overcoming obstacles, that’s all sacrifice.”
Huang has been open about his unrivalled work ethic and the commitment he expects from his employees. Previously, the 62-year-old CEO said he works from the moment he wakes up until the moment he goes to sleep, adding in an interview with Stripe’s CEOPatrick Collison last year that he can’t even watch a movie without thinking about his company.
In a 60 Minutes interview in 2024 he was asked whether “demanding,” “perfectionist,” and “not easy to work for,” were accurate descriptions of him, Huang said they fit him “perfectly,” explaining: “It should be like that. If you want to do extraordinary things, it shouldn’t be easy.”
A family trait
The Taiwanese-American entrepreneur attributed his commitment and determination to his parents: His father, determined to see his children grow up in America; and his mother, teaching her children English despite the fact she didn’t speak the language herself.
“My parents wanted us to pursue the American Dream,” Huang said. “They didn’t have very much, they were quite modest, and moving to the United States was quite difficult for us in 1973, but somehow we made our way through it. I think the life of struggle, endeavour, nothing for granted, having to earn anything, I think was good CEO training.”
Huang went on to study at Oregon State and Stanford University, crediting his parents with instilling a belief in him that he could achieve. Wearing his usual leather jacket, Huang added his mother had insisted he was “special,” explaining: “Often times, if people tell you that you’re better, greater, more capable than you are, you might live up to that expectation. It reminds us to do the same with our companies, it reminds us to do the same with each other.”
“[My mother] left me with an impression that nothing could be that hard, to this day, and people have seen me adapt.”
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James Cameron on ‘Avatar 3’s Motion Capture Evolution
Following the success of his 2009 groundbreaking Avatar action fantasy film, and the 2023 follow-up Avatar: The Way of Water, James Cameron insists his third 20th Century Studios blockbuster, Avatar: Fire and Ash, called for the most complex…
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Cities: Skylines upheaval: Developer and publisher announce “mutual” breakup
For well over a decade now, the Cities franchise has done its best to pick up the urban simulation ball that EA’s SimCity famously dropped. Going forward, though, that ball will be handed…
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Rise in IPD Calls for Development of More Pneumococcal Vaccines
Amid nearly a 100% increase in invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) between 2012 and 2024, there is an apparent need to develop pneumococcal vaccines with greater valency to protect against nonvaccine serotypes (NVTs).
Despite efficacy in the…
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Bangladesh demands India extradite convicted ex-PM Hasina – Arab News
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Amazon is selling the Meta Quest 3S for $70 off ahead of Black Friday (and with a free game)
Kerry Wan/ZDNET Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.
Meta’s Quest 3S is a great entry point into the world of virtual reality. It’s better than the Quest 2, introducing several improvements to “performance, capabilities, and…
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Lecanemab or Lithium for Alzheimer Disease Dementia? New Data Change Everything
Lecanemab is being heavily promoted for treatment of minimal cognitive impairment (MCI) and early Alzheimer disease (AD) dementia. But recent data support consideration of low-dose lithium for this role and for primary prevention of cognitive…
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