Дженсен Хуанг заявил, что AGI уже достигнут — что это значит для технологий

In a statement that sent shockwaves through the tech world, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang declared that artificial general intelligence (AGI) has already been achieved. Speaking on the Lex Fridman podcast, Huang didn't hedge or qualify — he said it plainly: "I think we've achieved AGI."
Redefining the Goalposts
When Fridman proposed a definition of AGI as an AI capable of building and running a billion-dollar tech company, Huang responded without hesitation: "I think it's now."
His reasoning is pragmatic rather than philosophical. An AI system that creates a viral application, generates a billion dollars in revenue, and then shuts down still counts as AGI in Huang's framework. He drew parallels to dot-com era companies — short-lived but undeniably real businesses.
What Nvidia Sees That Others Don't
Huang's perspective carries weight. Nvidia isn't just selling GPUs — they're the infrastructure backbone of every major AI lab on the planet. When the CEO of the company powering OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Meta AI says AGI is here, it's worth paying attention.
He noted that AI already plays a critical role in designing Nvidia's own H100 chips, suggesting that the line between human and machine intelligence in engineering is already blurring.
Not Everyone Agrees
Former Tesla AI chief Andrej Karpathy pushed back, estimating AGI is still a decade away. "The models are amazing. They still need a lot of work," Karpathy said, arguing the industry is making too big a leap in its claims.
The disagreement highlights a fundamental tension in AI: the definition of AGI itself. If AGI means "as capable as an average human at most cognitive tasks," current LLMs arguably qualify in many domains. If it means "fully autonomous reasoning across all domains without supervision," we're not there yet.
What This Means for Businesses
Regardless of whether you agree with Huang's definition, the practical implications are clear:
- AI agents are becoming autonomous — from coding to content creation to customer service
- The GPU arms race intensifies — Nvidia's market position strengthens with every AGI claim
- Startups should act now — the window for AI-native businesses is wide open
- Traditional software is being disrupted — if AI can build billion-dollar apps, no industry is safe
The Bottom Line
Jensen Huang isn't known for empty hype. When the man whose company powers the AI revolution says AGI has arrived, it's either the most important tech announcement of the decade — or the most expensive marketing campaign in history.
Either way, the conversation has shifted. We're no longer asking "when will AGI arrive?" We're debating whether it's already here.
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