While IonQ, Rigetti Computing, and D-Wave Quantum are central figures in the quantum computing spotlight, I see a member of the "Magnificent Seven" as the superior choice.

Back in 1999, a fledgling semiconductor company called Nvidia invented a chipset called the graphics processing unit (GPU) -- a product that, at the time, few people realized they would one day need.

Two decades ago, GPUs were primarily marketed toward gamers and graphic designers. But Nvidia's visionary CEO, Jensen Huang, saw the broad potential of these advanced chips before anyone else.

When the GPU was initially released, AI applications were both niche and barely imagined. But Huang understood that the world's most important problems would be solved by anticipating latent needs -- capabilities that people wil

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