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It’s also funny to see Jensen wearing a suit rather than his customary leather jacket. This is definitely an investor call.

Intel’s Tan doesn’t rule out Nvidia’s using Intel Foundry for this partnership.

Nvidia’s investment in Intel, Huang says, is a major vote of confidence in the future of Intel. Jensen also mentioned earlier that the Trump administration wasn’t involved in this partnership, but that the administration is very supportive.

Neither will say which process node — or which foundry — the new chips will be fabbed on. However, this will be a tens of billions of dollar product partnership between the two companies, which is definitely a lift for Intel.

Another question about whether Nvidia is going to lean into Intel’s foundry business. Both Huang and Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan praise TSMC’s foundry business. But this announcement is going to stay focused on datacenter and client CPU integration.

Cramer follows up with a question about Intel Foundry services and whether Nvidia will move over to Intel from TSMC. Huang is non-commital, but given the amount of investment involved, Huang says that Nvidia will be a major customer of Intel going forward.

Take that as you will, but if Intel 18A is as good and viable as Intel claims it to be, I can’t see how Nvidia won’t get first crack at those nodes.

OK, so Jim Cramer at CNBC is asking for the business/market impact of this announcement. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang brings up the integrated RTX GPU chiplet into Intel SoCs, which will be very competitive with AMD’s APUs found in thin and light gaming laptops as well as mini-PCs and gaming handhelds.

Hey folks, this is John Loeffler, US Computing Editor, here to bring you all the news and reaction I can muster to the Nvidia x Intel press conference this afternoon. We’ve also got some insights from my colleagues at TechRadar Pro regarding the new data center x86 products, which I’ll be bringing to you shortly.

We’re about to start, so stay tuned for the latest as it happens.

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