The success rate of parallel computing was zero percent before we came along,â Huang said, rattling off a list of forgotten start-ups. âLiterally zero. Everyone who tried to make it into a business had failed.â Huang ignored this dismal record, pursuing his unconventional vision in open defiance of Wall Street for more than a decade. He looked for customers besides gamers, ones who needed a lot of computing powerâweather forecasters, radiologists, deep-water oil prospectors, that sort of thing. During this time, Nvidiaâs stock price floundered, and he had to fend off corporate raiders to retain his job.
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The product was known as a âgraphics accelerator,â and at least thirty-five competitors were trying to build one. Huang worried there was no space for a thirty-sixth. The leading expert in computer graphics was Jon Peddie, who had written several textbooks on the topic. Huang had reached out to Peddie to get a sense of the market, and the two soon became friends, with Huang calling incessantly, asking questions late into the night. Peddie advised Huang that the space was too crowded and that many of the best engineers were already working for other start-ups. âI told him not to do it,â Peddie said. âThat was the best advice he never took.
Huang had managed to stay ahead of his competitors so far, but his asset-light âmerchantâ business was essentially just a collection of engineers sitting around a Silicon Valley office park. If those engineers werenât constantly developing new, difficult-to-replicate technology,
manufacturers in Asia would start knocking off his chips, and Nvidia would cease to exist. âIf we donât reinvent computer graphics, if we donât reinvent ourselves, and we donât open the canvas for the things that we can do on this processor, we will be commoditized out of existence,â Huang later said. Not to gamble was the biggest risk of all.
NINE: Cuda
âTo distinguish himself, Huang had to pursue a strategy that so defied conventional business logic that ATI wouldnât follow. He had to build an exploratory product, like a $300 entry-level scientific supercomputer that not only didnât have competitors but also didnât even have obvious customers. The zero-billion-dollar market, by definition, was one that only he would participate inâone that only he would even see. Huang was going to build a baseball diamond in a cornfield and wait for the players to arrive.
By 2012, the situation was becoming dire. Nvidiaâs stock price had not appreciated in more than a decade, and although revenues and employment at the company had grown considerably, profits remained flat. Huang was bringing supercomputing to the masses, but the masses didnât want it.
Two fringe strains of computer science, starved of investment, hatedâno, detestedâby industry and researchers alike had somehow unified to form a thriving, sprawling entity now careering toward sentience. âI just thought, there is no way that Nvidia is this lucky,â Aarts said. âThereâs no way that deep learning just fits this perfectly because Nvidia has never put any effort into it!â
Huang called it âluck, founded by vision.â
For Dally, it was Huangâs tireless work ethic that made Nvidia succeed. Even Dally, who left no spare second in his day, could not quite believe the superhuman efforts of his boss. âThe rest of us are just here to reduce the bandwidth demands on Jensen,â Dally said. âI mean, when does he sleep?â Diercks agreed: âHis hobbies are work, email, and work.â
Plenty of people worked long hours, though. Jens Horstmann attributed Huangâs success to his adaptability. âIâve often asked myself, how is it that we started in the same cubicle, you know, with a similar IQ, both working equally hard,â Horstmann said. âHow is it that this person not only built this amazing company, but also a network around him of people thatâthat would just die for him if needed?â Huang, Horstmann believed, had changed himself many times. He recalled Huang at LSI, pushing the simulation software to its outer limits. âNow, heâs still doing the same thing, but what heâs engineering is himself. He was not born as a great CEO; he was not destined to be one. He transformed himself into one, just by abstracting! Just by problem-solving the inputs and outputs of what a good CEO should be.