Close Menu
  • Tech Insights
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Money
  • Latest in Tech
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT UpdatesTechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT Updates
  • Tech Insights
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Money
  • Latest in Tech
TechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT UpdatesTechzLab – Tech News, Gadgets, Mobile & IT Updates
Home » Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Is Bananas for Google Gemini’s AI Image Generator
Latest in Tech

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Is Bananas for Google Gemini’s AI Image Generator

adminBy adminSeptember 17, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is in London, standing in front of a room full of journalists, outing himself as a huge fan of Gemini’s Nano Banana. “How could anyone not love Nano Banana? I mean Nano Banana, how good is that? Tell me it’s not true!” He addresses the room. No one responds. “Tell me it’s not true! It’s so good. I was just talking to Demis [Hassabis, CEO of DeepMind] yesterday and I said ‘How about that Nano Banana! How good is that?’”

It looks like lots of people agree with him: The popularity of the Nano Banana AI image generator—which launched in August and allows users to make precise edits to AI images while preserving the quality of faces, animals, or other objects in the background—caused a 300 million–image surge for Gemini in the first few days of September, according to a post on X by Josh Woodward, VP of Google Labs and Google Gemini.

Huang, whose company was among a cohort of big US technology companies to announce investments in data centers, supercomputers, and AI research in the UK on Tuesday, is on a high. Speaking ahead of a white-tie event with UK prime minister Keir Starmer (where he plans to wear custom black leather tails), he’s boisterously optimistic about the future of AI in the UK, saying the country is “too humble” about the country’s potential for AI advancements.

He cites the UK’s pedigree in themes as wide as the industrial revolution, steam trains, DeepMind (now owned by Google), and university researchers, as well as other tangential skills. “No one fries food better than you do,” he quips. “Your tea is good. You’re great. Come on!”

Nvidia announced a $683 million equity investment in data center builder Nscale this week, a move that—alongside investments from OpenAI and Microsoft—has propelled the company to the epicenter of this AI push in the UK. Huang estimates that Nscale will generate more than $68 billion in revenue over six years. “I’ll go on record to say I’m the best thing that’s ever happened to him,” he says, referring to Nscale CEO Josh Payne.

“As AI services get deployed—I’m sure that all of you use it. I use it every day, and it’s improved my learning, my thinking. It’s helped me access information, access knowledge a lot more efficiently. It helps me write, helps me think, it helps me formulate ideas. So my experience with AI is likely going to be everybody’s experience. I have the benefit of using all the AI—how good is that?”

The leather-jacket-wearing billionaire, who previously told WIRED that he uses AI agents in his personal life, has expanded on how he uses AI (that’s not Nano Banana) for most daily things, including his public speeches and research.

“I really like using an AI word processor because it remembers me and knows what I’m going to talk about. I could describe the different circumstance that I’m in, and yet it still knows that I’m Jensen, just in a different circumstance,” Huang explains. “In that way it could reshape what I’m doing and be helpful. It’s a thinking partner, it’s truly terrific, and it saves me a ton of time. Frankly, I think the quality of work is better.”

His favorite one to use “depends on what I’m doing,” he says. “For something more technical I will use Gemini. If I’m doing something where it’s a bit more artistic, I prefer Grok. If it’s very fast information access I prefer Perplexity—it does a really good job of presenting research to me. And for near everyday use I enjoy using ChatGPT,” Huang says.

“When I am doing something serious, I will give the same prompt to all of them, and then I ask them to, because it’s research oriented, critique each other’s work. Then I take the best one.”

In the end though, all topics lead back to Nano Banana. “AI should be democratized for everyone. There should be no person who is left behind, it’s not sensible to me that someone should be left behind on electricity or the internet of the next level of technology,” he says.

“AI is the single greatest opportunity for us to close the technology divide,” says Huang. “This technology is so easy to use—who doesn’t know how to use Nano?”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

NYT Strands hints and answers for Wednesday, September 17 (game #563)

September 16, 2025

Our Exclusive Lab Testing on 100 Cordless Vacuum Cleaners Tells Us One Surprising Truth

September 15, 2025

I Wasn’t Sure I Wanted Anthropic to Pay Me for My Books—I Do Now

September 14, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest
  • ‘The best cheap phone I’ve tested in years’: the Motorola Edge 60 just earned a spot in our best cheap phones guide – here’s why September 17, 2025
  • Meta launches Hyperscape, technology to turn real-world spaces into VR | TechCrunch September 17, 2025
  • What does the cat do in No, I’m not a Human? – Destructoid September 17, 2025
  • Android will soon be able to theme every app icon, and Google Play won't let developers opt out – Android Authority September 17, 2025
  • Millions of Dell laptops at risk of attack due to security chip flaw — update your PC right now – Tom's Guide September 17, 2025
We are social
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Techzlab.

Tags
AI ai coding Andy Konwinski Apple artificial intelligence Astranis Bessemer Venture Partners Boeing ChatGPT cybersecurity data centers defense tech doge Donald Trump dual use Elon Musk evergreens EVs Exclusive Google Grok Gupshup In Brief iPhone K Prize Latent Labs Laude Institute Meta Microsoft northrop grumman Openai Perplexity Pinterest robotics siri social media Space Force SpaceX Spotify TechCrunch All Stage TechCrunch All Stage 2025 Tesla Trump Administration unicorn viasat
Archives
Quick Link
  • Apps (290)
  • From the Editor (3)
  • Gaming (296)
  • Laptops (297)
  • Latest in Tech (296)
  • Mobiles (299)
  • Money (123)
  • Tech Insights (293)
Don't miss

Meta announces new Oakley Vanguard smart glasses – here’s how they’re better than the HSTN glasses for athletes

September 17, 2025

Colossus: The Forbin Project warned about AI in 1970, now it is quietly vanishing from streaming

September 16, 2025

Check Your Bank Accounts, You Might Spot a Deposit From a Facebook Lawsuit

September 15, 2025
Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
© 2025 Techzlab.com Designed and Developed by WebExpert.
  • Home
  • From the Editor
  • Money
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.