

That's right, the whole presentation - from each individual slide and every icon in them to the "keynote" from CEO Jensen Huang - was created digitally using Nvidia Onmiverse, the company's platform for virtual collaboration and real-time simulation. It's unclear how many people participated in the contest, but that's irrelevant because all you need to know at this point is that the entire presentation was one giant Easter egg. To participate, users were asked to tweet any Easter eggs they found to the company for a chance to win coveted prizes like an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090.

Nvidia as part of its GPU Technology Conference (GTC) keynote earlier this year hosted a secret treasure hunt in which it invited onlookers to see if they could spot "anything out of the ordinary" during the presentation. Bonian Riebe, SVA System Vertrieb Alexander GmbH Miguel Martinez, NVIDIA Conversational AI technologies are becoming ubiquitous, with countless products taking advantage of automatic speech recognition, natural language understanding, and speech synthesis coming to market. We apologize for the confusion this has caused, although in fairness, when Nvidia says things like "digital Jensen was then brought into a replica of his kitchen that was deconstructed to reveal the holodeck within Omniverse, surprising the audience and making them question how much of the keynote was real, or rendered," it's easy to see how this was misconstrued. Taken word for word, the virtual Jensen was only seen on screen for 14 seconds – and that's a portion that honestly looks less than impressive – the rest of the time, it was himself in the flesh. Through all but 14 seconds of the hour and 48 minute presentation - from 1:02:41 to 1:02:55 - Huang himself spoke in the keynote." 13): After this article was published, Nvidia updated its blog post with the following information: "To be sure, you can't have a keynote without a flesh and blood person at the center. It was a bold move, but one that allowed Nvidia to demonstrate (if only in hindsight) just how impressive its Omniverse platform truly is.
NVIDIA KEYNOTE 2021 CGI PLUS
We're remotely covering the online-only show to bring you all the breaking tech news and launches, plus a smattering of hands-on reviews.Mind-blowing: Nvidia has revealed that its GTC 2021 keynote that aired back in April took place entirely in the metaverse (corrected: no, it didn't) meaning to say the whole thing was CGI.

NVIDIA KEYNOTE 2021 CGI PC
PC gaming is more than just desktop, though. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang kicks off GTC21 on Novemwith a keynote that presents the latest breakthroughs in AI, data science, high performance computing, graphics, edge computing. We've heard some rumors that Nvidia is getting ready to launch three new desktop graphics cards at CES 2021, and given that everyone is at home playing games still, we think that's pretty likely. We seriously doubt that Nvidia is going to stop releasing Ampere desktop graphics cards any time soon – there were 12 GeForce cards last generation, and we expect the same this time around – and there are currently only 4 Ampere cards. Nvidia is hot off the launch of its Ampere lineup of graphics cards, just recently launching the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti on December 1, 2020. See more What we expect from the Nvidia CES 2021 keynote
