Nvidia on Monday took the wraps off Vera Rubin, a sweeping new computing platform built from seven chips now in full production — and backed by an extraordinary lineup of customers that includes Anthropic, OpenAI, Meta and Mistral AI, along with every major cloud provider.The message to the AI industry, and to investors, was unmistakable: Nvidia is not slowing down. The Vera Rubin platform claims up to 10x more inference throughput per watt and one-tenth the cost per token compared with the Blackwell systems that only recently began shipping. CEO Jensen Huang, speaking at the company’s annual GTC conference, called it “a generational leap” that would kick off “the greatest infrastructure buildout in history.” Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure will all offer the platform, and more than 80 manufacturing partners are building systems around it.”Vera Rubin is a generational leap — seven breakthrough chips, five racks, one giant supercomputer — built to power every phase of AI,” Huang declared. “The agentic AI inflection point has arrived with Vera Rubin kicking off the greatest infrastructure buildout in history.”In any other industry, such rhetoric might be dismissed as keynote theater. But Nvidia occupies a singular position in the global economy — a company whose products have become so essential to the AI boom that its market capitalization now rivals the GDP of mid-sized nations. When Huang says the infrastructure buildout is historic, the CEOs of the companies actually writing the checks are standing behind him, nodding.Dario Amodei, the chief executive of Anthropic, said Nvidia’s platform “gives us the compute, networking and system design to keep delivering while advancing the safety and reliability our customers depend on.” Sam Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, said that “with Nvidia Vera Rubin, we’ll run more powerful models and agents at massive scale and deliver faster, more reliable systems to hundreds of million …