Book review: The Thinking Machine
I listened to this book as an audiobook through the Libby app, which basically brings your public library to your phone. The Thinking Machine is about Jensen Huang and the rise of Nvidia from graphics chips to AI dominance. The author, Stephen Witt, is a long-form tech journalist. His writing is nice and clear. But it does not have a distinctive voice. I kept thinking of Michael Lewis , whose books have more narrative personality and rhythm. The book is written for a lay audience. Technical ideas are explained in simplified terms. Much of these were already familiar to me, and I had also lived through Nvidia going from graphics cards to AI chips. (I wish I had bought more stock.) I was hoping to learn more about Jensen, his philosophy, habits, inner life, management style. There is not much of that in the book. I think that absence is telling. Jensen comes across as a very private person, and almost monastic about work. There does not seem to be a boundary there: he has become one...