Nvidia
Emmett Kilgariff is a seasoned professional with extensive experience in GPU architecture and hardware engineering. Currently serving as Vice President of GPU Architecture at NVIDIA since December 2000, Emmett has contributed to the development of major GPUs, directly overseeing the RSX chip in the PS3 and the Fermi and Maxwell architectures, among others. Prior roles include Vice President of Architecture at 3dfx Interactive and Hardware Manager positions at Silicon Engineering, Silicon Graphics, and Kubota Computer, where Emmett was involved in significant projects like the Talisman Project with Microsoft. Early career experience includes hardware engineering at Motorola, Sun Microsystems, and Goodyear, focusing on microelectronics, graphics processors, and satellite ground stations. Emmett holds a Bachelor's degree from Purdue University, obtained between 1977 and 1980.
This person is not in any teams
Nvidia
684 followers
NVIDIA has pioneered accelerated computing to tackle challenges that otherwise can’t be solved. Their work in AI and computer graphics is transforming industries valued at more than $100 trillion, from gaming to healthcare to transportation, and profoundly impacting society. NVIDIA is a place where scientists, artists, creators, and adventurers can do their life’s work. They take on tough problems where they can shape the world for the better, and where they can make a unique contribution. This has guided them into incredibly powerful technological forces and across the world’s largest and most important industries. They are well-known for their RTX and AI technologies more specifically. RTX is everywhere. More than 250 games and apps now use RTX to deliver stunning ray-traced graphics—including AAA blockbusters like Cyberpunk 2077, and digital creation apps like Autodesk 3ds Max, Blender, and the Epic Games' Unreal Engine. NVIDIA GeForce 30 Series GPUs deliver unmatched performance, from high-end rigs to incredibly thin and light laptops. As companies process mountains of data to train and refine AI models, their data centers are essentially becoming AI factories. A whole new type of data center has emerged because of AI. Most recently, NVIDIA unveiled a giant wave of products: the new Hopper GPU and Grace CPU Superchip, new networking technology, new systems, and new software products to power next-generation data centers. AI is the most powerful technology force the world has ever known. NVIDIA AI brings together computer vision, conversational AI, recommender systems, avatars, robotics, and autonomous vehicles. These AI skills are state of the art, trained to be used in production, and used by more than 25,000 companies today.