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About NVIDIA
NVIDIA awakened the world to computer graphics when it invented the GPU in 1999. From its roots in visual computing, the company expanded into parallel computing and mobile computing. Today, its processors power a broad range of products from smartphones to supercomputers. NVIDIA's mobile processors are used in phones, tablets and auto infotainment systems. PC gamers rely on GPUs to enjoy spectacularly immersive worlds. Professionals use them to create visual effects in movies and design everything from golf clubs to jumbo jets. And researchers utilize GPUs to advance the frontiers of science with high-performance computers. The company holds more than 2,300 patents worldwide, including ones covering ideas essential to modern computing.
Our heritage is in PC graphics and our GeForce processors deliver amazing visual experiences to the thriving gaming community around the world. The PC gaming market is expected to reach $25B in 2016. Millions of gamers attend events like Gamescom, Dreamhack, Blizzcon and China Joy every year. And gaming is one of the most popular activities in China’s 160,000+ icafes. PC Gamers can enjoy fully immersive worlds with innovations that complement GeForce, such as NVIDIA PhysX for thrilling, realistic effects, and the NVIDIA 3D Vision suite of technologies, including active-shutter glasses, for stereo 3D.
In the early 2000s, our invention of a programmable processor expanded NVIDIA’s reach into professional graphics. Today, animators, broadcasters, visual-effects artists and industrial designers overwhelmingly use Quadro. And with NVIDIA Maximus technology, designers and engineers can do graphics-intensive work and compute-intensive work at the same time, on the same machine. The majority of the world’s cars and planes, as well as a host of consumer products like tennis shoes and shampoo bottles, are designed using Quadro graphics cards. In film, Quadro graphics were behind all of the "Best Visual Effects" Oscar nominees for the past three years running.
NVIDIA’s expertise in programmable GPUs led to breakthroughs in parallel processing. Scientists and researchers around the world are using Tesla graphics cards to tackle the most complex challenges, from climate modeling to quantum physics to finding a cure for cancer. NVIDIA CUDA architecture enables GPUs to work not just with the pixels of an image, but with numerical data. NVIDIA Tesla processors harness CUDA to make supercomputing more efficient and more accessible. Three of the top five supercom¬puters are powered by Tesla GPUs. And on the November 2011 list of Top500 supercomputers, the number of NVIDIA GPU-powered systems more than tripled in just a year, to 35.
With deep experience in visual and parallel computing, NVIDIA is well positioned to drive the mobile computing revolution. Today, the most personal computers are mobile computers. Tegra, a mobile super chip, is powering the next generation of mobile phones and tablets, as well as in-car safety and infotainment systems. The Tegra 2 chip firmly established NVIDIA as a major player in mobile computing. With Tegra 3, NVIDIA is building on its technology leadership. Tegra 3’s 4-PLUS-1™ quad-core architecture provides both exceptional processing power and great battery life. It does this by using four powerful CPU cores to handle demanding tasks, such as gaming, and a fifth low-power, battery-saver core to manage less strenuous tasks – like processing e-mail or operating in standby mode.