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People are focused on NVIDIA’s software/driver shift and ecosystem updates, especially the long-awaited retirement of the NVIDIA Control Panel after 20 years, with driver changes moving to the NVIDIA App. Additional discussion covers new CUDA/AI research tools and Linux driver/compatibility chatter, alongside geopolitical headlines involving chips and AI hardware supply chains.

CEO
Jensen Huang
Founded
1993
Headquarters
Santa Clara, California
Employees
29,600
Ticker
NASDAQ: NVDA
13.8 Activity score down · 3d
23.4 Peak score 3d window
Neutral Sentiment
18 Sources · 40 signals
Last updated · next ~08:00
3d First on radar
Key Takeaway NVIDIA is finally retiring the legacy Control Panel, and upcoming driver updates are expected to route through the NVIDIA App instead.
AI summary · grounded in cited sources
Control Panel deprecation Linux drivers updates AI chips & geopolitics
Neutral 52/100
AI Brief

NVIDIA is finally retiring the legacy Control Panel, and upcoming driver updates are expected to route through the NVIDIA App instead.

People are focused on NVIDIA’s software/driver shift and ecosystem updates, especially the long-awaited retirement of the NVIDIA Control Panel after 20 years, with driver changes moving to the NVIDIA App. Additional discussion covers new CUDA/AI research tools and Linux driver/compatibility chatter, alongside geopolitical headlines involving chips and AI hardware supply chains.

Trending Activity ▲ +0.9 24h
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Top 3 signals · NVIDIA is finally retiring the legacy Control Panel, and

Briefing Findings · NVIDIA is finally retiring the legacy Control Panel, and

Story-specific findings extracted from this briefing's coverage. Fast Facts in the sidebar holds the canonical reference data (CEO, founded, ticker).

Control Panel lifespan NVIDIA’s Control Panel app is being retired after 20 years
Driver update destination New driver updates are shipping only with the NVIDIA App
Driver version mentioned NVIDIA driver 610.47 is referenced alongside Control Panel notes

What to Watch

  • Test upcoming NVIDIA driver updates (e.g., 610.47+) and verify your workflows inside the NVIDIA App after Control Panel retirement. Tom's Hardware
  • Follow Linux_Gaming threads for new-driver regressions (e.g., Forza Horizon 6 reports) after each NVIDIA driver release. TechPowerUp

What Changed

  • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 > ASUS TUF Gaming 9070XT TechPowerUp
  • Nvidia LocateAnything - Fast and High-Quality Vision-Language Grounding with Parallel Box Decoding. (10x faster than Qwen3-VL) r/LocalLLaMA
  • CUDA 13.3: NVIDIA continues to move GPU programming from the thread to the tile Igor's LAB
  • NVIDIA Driver 610.47: Game Ready for 007 First Light, but the bigger change lies in the app Igor's LAB
Source-backed brief 1 article across 1 publication · brief is source backed Show all sources
Broader NVIDIA coverage · not part of the NVIDIA is finally retiring the legacy Control Panel, and story

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Direct NVIDIA · 4 Articles whose headline is primarily about NVIDIA.

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PC Gamer 5 articles

Tracking: It looks like Nvidia's AI inference GPU won't see the light of day this year, which could actually be good news for PC gamers / Potential DLSS 5 references have been found in the latest Nvidia driver, but it's all gone quiet on the AI image enhancement front

Tom's Hardware 4 articles

Tracking: Nvidia offers restricted access to Vera CPU in first round of Linux benchmarks - 88-core monster competes with or beats Epyc and Xeon in selected tests / China adds homegrown AI chips to 'secure and reliable' procurement list for the first time — nine options added as move away from Nvidia continues

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How does NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 deliver exascale compute? 

NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 is an exascale computer in a single rack. With 72 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs interconnected by the largest production scale-up compute fabric, NVIDIA NVLink provides 130 terabytes per second (TB/s) of low-latency GPU communication bandwidth for AI and high-performance computing (HPC) workloads. Multiple GB200 NVL72 systems combined in a cluster create hierarchical network topology with large domains of very high networking bandwidth.  An AI training job can greatly benefit from the abundant networking bandwidth offered by GB200 NVL72, when scheduled to maximize the use of NVLink

Unlock Exascale Performance on NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 with Slurm Topology-Aware Job Scheduling | NVIDIA Technical Blog
How does GB200 NVL72 enable larger segment sizes?

In multi-GPU workloads, the job segment size defines the subunit made of nodes that can communicate with each other entirely over NVLink. Figure 1 illustrates how segment number (Y) and segment size (S) are used to define the GPUs assigned to a specific job. GPUs per node (G) is always four for GB200 and GB300.  In prior systems, such as NVIDIA HGX H100, jobs were limited to a segment size of one node. The GB200 NVL72 system supports much larger segment sizes (up to 18 nodes) while also efficiently supporting segments as a single node. The optimal segment size for a given application is determ

Unlock Exascale Performance on NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 with Slurm Topology-Aware Job Scheduling | NVIDIA Technical Blog
What is the best job scheduling approach for GB200 NVL72?

Based on our simulation results and performance testing, we recommend a scheduling approach for NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 clusters that prioritizes large job performance while maintaining high utilization. Large jobs of 64 GPUs or more should be given access to the maximum number of NVLink domains, using segment sizing to ensure proportional GPU allocation across domains. Segment-based scheduling is essential for aligning resources with workload patterns. For jobs of 32 nodes or more, a segment size of 16 is recommended if the application can benefit from it, while smaller jobs are better suited to s

Unlock Exascale Performance on NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 with Slurm Topology-Aware Job Scheduling | NVIDIA Technical Blog
Can a start-up really launch a new GPU?

There’s a logic to Bolt’s approach. Nvidia and AMD are focused on AI, but GPUs are still useful for many tasks besides AI. However, Bolt will need to overcome two key technical hurdles. The first is production. Cutting-edge silicon production is in short supply and leaders like Nvidia have most leading-edge production capacity tied up. The Zeus GPU will instead be fabricated on TSMC’s older N5 process node. Bolt is betting that an older process node will keep Zeus competitive with Nvidia on price. Bolt may also find it challenging to convince users that an unproven GPU is a safe bet. Driver su

Zeus GPU Bets on FP64 and Path Tracing Over AI
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