NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang said that artificial intelligence has become the "great equalizer" because programming is now accessible to everyone thanks to ordinary human language, CNBC writes.
Speaking at the London Tech Week conference alongside UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, he stressed that previously, working with computers required knowing complex programming languages, building computer architectures, and understanding technical details. Now everything has changed: ordinary human language has become the programming language.
Huang noted that the new generation of chatbots — such as ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, and Microsoft’s Copilot — allows you to interact with machines as if you were talking to another person. Now, he says, to ask an AI to create a program, an image, or a poem, you just need to “approve politely.” It’s similar to the process of human learning. You can give feedback, tell it what it can do better, and the system will improve the result on its own.
During his speech, he gave an example. If you tell a computer that it is a poet and ask it to write a poem about today's event, it will quickly cope with the task. And if you ask it to do better, it will try again and offer an improved version.
These statements come amid the active adoption of AI in the business environment. Companies like Shopify, Duolingo, and Fiverr are encouraging their employees to integrate artificial intelligence into their daily work.
Huang urged people not to fear AI, but to use it as a tool to improve their own effectiveness. He emphasized that even children already intuitively communicate with such systems, and this form of interaction with computers will change the world.
As a reminder, NVIDIA recently overtook Microsoft and regained its status as the most valuable company in the world. The company also shared its results for the first quarter of fiscal 2026 — NVIDIA's gaming business set a new record.