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FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 5THE PRICE OF GREATNESSPeople look at Jensen Huang today and see power.The CEO of NVIDIA.T...
06/11/2026

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 5

THE PRICE OF GREATNESS

People look at Jensen Huang today and see power.

The CEO of NVIDIA.

The face of the AI revolution.

A man standing at the center of one of the biggest technological shifts of our time.

But that is the version the world sees now.

There was another version.

A founder sitting through failed products.

A CEO watching cash run low.

A leader having to lay off employees while still trying to convince people the company had a future.

Jensen Huang has admitted that building NVIDIA was far harder than he ever imagined.

At one point, the company nearly collapsed.

The headlines today make success look inevitable.

But in those early years, nothing was inevitable.

There were no guarantees.

No global AI boom.

No trillion-dollar spotlight.

Just pressure.

Decisions.

Doubt.

And the responsibility of keeping a fragile company alive.

Through those years, one person stood beside him before the world had a reason to believe.

His wife, Lori.

Before NVIDIA became a symbol of the AI age, it was still a risky dream.

And behind that dream was a family carrying the uncertainty with him.

That detail matters.

Because success stories often make founders look like they carried everything alone.

Most of them did not.

Someone believed before the market did.

Someone stayed during the years when the outcome was unclear.

Someone saw the burden before the world saw the glory.

Jensen is known for being intense.

Demanding.

Obsessed with details.

But maybe that intensity came from knowing how close everything once came to failure.

When you have lived through near-collapse, you do not treat the future casually.

And yet, what makes Jensen Huang’s story memorable is not only the empire he built.

It is the contrast.

He can stand on the biggest stages in technology...

then sit down for a simple bowl of noodles.

He can help shape the future of artificial intelligence...

while still carrying the humility of his roots.

That may be the real price of greatness.

Not just the work.

Not just the pressure.

But learning how to carry success without losing yourself.

A Perspective from Strategic Perspectives:

What do you think success costs the people who build extraordinary things?

And is the sacrifice worth it?

Let’s discuss below. 👇

NVIDIA Is No Longer Just A Chip CompanyNVIDIA started as a graphics company.Today, it powers much of the world's AI infr...
06/10/2026

NVIDIA Is No Longer Just A Chip Company
NVIDIA started as a graphics company.
Today, it powers much of the world's AI infrastructure.
From ChatGPT to autonomous vehicles, NVIDIA chips sit behind many of the technologies shaping the future.
Just a few years ago, most people knew NVIDIA as a gaming company.
Today, governments, startups, and some of the world's largest companies are competing for access to its AI hardware.
It's one of the most remarkable business transformations in modern technology.
The question is:
Which industry do you think AI will transform the most over the next 10 years?
Healthcare
Education
Real Estate
Finance
Or something else entirely?
👇 Share your prediction in the comments.

Most people want success.Few want the struggle that creates it.Jensen Huang once gave graduates some unconventional advi...
06/09/2026

Most people want success.

Few want the struggle that creates it.

Jensen Huang once gave graduates some unconventional advice:

“I wish upon you ample doses of pain and suffering.”

Not because suffering is good.

But because resilience is forged where comfort ends.

The moments that shape us most are rarely the ones we’d choose for ourselves.

The setbacks.

The failures.

The nights you want to quit but don’t.

That’s where real growth happens.

What’s one challenge that made you stronger?

Drop your story below—let’s learn from each other. 👇

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 4WHY JENSEN HUANG WISHES YOU MORE SUFFERINGMost graduation speakers offer the same advice:...
06/07/2026

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 4

WHY JENSEN HUANG WISHES YOU MORE SUFFERING

Most graduation speakers offer the same advice:

Follow your passion.

Dream big.

Believe in yourself.

Jensen Huang offered something very different.

“I wish upon you ample doses of pain and suffering.”

The audience laughed.

But behind that sentence was a founder who had lived through years most people never saw.

In NVIDIA’s early days, the company came close to running out of money.

Employees had to be laid off.

Products failed.

Competitors were stronger.

And there were moments when the future of the company was far from certain.

Those experiences shaped the way Jensen Huang thinks about resilience.

He was not saying pain is good.

He was saying easy times rarely teach the lessons that hard times do.

Looking back, Huang once admitted that if he had known how difficult building NVIDIA would be, he might never have started.

That may be one of the most honest things a successful founder can say.

Because the world usually sees the outcome.

The keynote.

The leather jacket.

The stock price.

The AI revolution.

But it rarely sees the cost.

The pressure.

The doubt.

The impossible decisions.

The nights when failure felt close.

That is why his message landed differently.

It was not motivational theater.

It was experience.

A reminder that resilience is often built in the chapters no one applauds.

A Perspective from Strategic Perspectives:

Do you agree with Jensen Huang?

Can resilience be built without hardship?

Let’s discuss below. 👇

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 3THE BET THAT ALMOST DESTROYED NVIDIAIn the mid-1990s, NVIDIA was close to running out of ...
06/05/2026

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 3

THE BET THAT ALMOST DESTROYED NVIDIA

In the mid-1990s, NVIDIA was close to running out of money.

Not struggling.

Close.

The company had to lay off employees.

Competitors were ahead.

Cash was disappearing.

And Jensen Huang was carrying the kind of pressure most people never see behind a success story.

At that moment, the safe move would have been simple:

Cut risk.

Follow the market.

Survive.

But Jensen Huang made a different bet.

He believed graphics chips could become much more than tools for better video games.

He believed they could become the foundation for a new kind of computing.

At the time, that sounded unreasonable.

There was no ChatGPT.

No AI gold rush.

No headlines calling NVIDIA the engine of the future.

Just a fragile company, a risky idea, and a founder who saw something early.

That is what makes founder stories so difficult to judge in real time.

Before success, conviction often looks like stubbornness.

Before the market agrees, vision often looks irrational.

Today, NVIDIA sits at the center of the AI revolution.

Its chips power data centers, machine learning, robotics, autonomous systems, and some of the most advanced AI systems in the world.

But before the world called it genius…

it looked like a dangerous bet.

A bet made when the company was weak.

A bet made before the world was ready.

A bet made by a founder willing to look wrong long enough to eventually be right.

A Perspective from Strategic Perspectives:

Would you bet your company on a future no one else could see?

Or does conviction only look obvious after it works?

Let’s discuss below. 👇

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 2FROM IMMIGRANT BOY TO NVIDIA FOUNDERBefore the leather jacket became iconic…Before NVIDIA...
06/03/2026

FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 2
FROM IMMIGRANT BOY TO NVIDIA FOUNDER
Before the leather jacket became iconic…
Before NVIDIA became one of the companies powering the AI revolution…
Before Jensen Huang became one of the most recognized CEOs in the world…
He was a young immigrant boy trying to find his place in a country that did not yet feel like home.
Born in Taiwan, Jensen Huang came to the United States as a child.
He did not arrive with certainty.
He arrived with a family willing to sacrifice for a future they could not fully see yet.
Think about that for a moment.
Before the keynote stages…
Before the AI chips…
Before the global attention…
There was a child learning a new language one word at a time.
Life was not easy.
The path forward was not guaranteed.
But his family gave him something more powerful than comfort.
They gave him belief.
The belief that hard work mattered.
The belief that education could change a life.
The belief that the future could be built, even when the present felt uncertain.
That belief carried him to Oregon State University.
Then to Stanford.
And eventually, to a booth inside a Denny’s restaurant, where Jensen Huang and his co-founders began the idea that would become NVIDIA.
At the time, it was not a global empire.
It was a fragile idea.
A risky bet.
A dream with no guarantee of survival.
But every great company begins long before the world notices it.
Sometimes it begins in a small home.
With immigrant parents.
With sacrifice.
With uncertainty.
With a child slowly learning how to belong.
Jensen Huang’s story is often told as a story about technology.
But underneath it is something deeper.
The story of a family that crossed an ocean, endured uncertainty, and believed the next generation could go further.
A Perspective from Strategic Perspectives:
Do hardships create ambition…
or do they simply reveal the ambition that was already there?
Let’s discuss below. 👇

This week, our page was recognized on the weekly engagement list in the Entrepreneur community.Reaching this milestone m...
06/02/2026

This week, our page was recognized on the weekly engagement list in the Entrepreneur community.
Reaching this milestone made me reflect on what true entrepreneurial greatness really looks like — and this story feels like the perfect one to share.
FROM NOODLES TO NVIDIA — PART 1
THE BILLIONAIRE WHO NEVER FORGOT HIS ROOTS
Most billionaires build distance between themselves and ordinary people.
Jensen Huang seems to do the opposite.
The world expects a tech titan behind one of the most important companies in artificial intelligence to move through life surrounded by security, luxury, and distance.
But recently, he was seen doing something far simpler.
Sitting on a street corner.
Holding a steaming bowl of black bean noodles.
Blending into everyday life like any curious traveler.
Just days after attending high-level meetings and state banquets, the NVIDIA founder returned to something much more human.
No grand entrance.
No billionaire performance.
No need to remind people who he was.
Only a man enjoying food, family, and the streets that still felt familiar.
In Taiwan, a viral photo showed him sitting in a humble restaurant with his parents, sharing the kind of dishes that carry memory more than status.
He treated journalists to steamed buns.
He paid for people waiting in line at a corn stand.
He smiled for photos with fans who recognized him not only as a CEO, but as one of their own.
That is what makes Jensen Huang different.
He is helping build the future of artificial intelligence, yet he still returns to the simple places that shaped him.
Some people become rich and spend the rest of their lives proving they are no longer ordinary.
Others reach the top of the world and still remember the people, streets, and sacrifices that made the climb possible.
Jensen Huang belongs to the second group.
And maybe that is why his story feels bigger than business.
It is not just about NVIDIA.
It is about roots.
Because true greatness is not only measured by how high you rise.
Sometimes, it is measured by how deeply you remember where you came from.
A Perspective from Strategic Perspectives:
Can true power still look ordinary?
Or does real power come from never needing to prove it?
Let's discuss below. 👇

The world often calls it luck after the outcome becomes obvious.Before the billion-dollar empire, Zhou Qunfei was a youn...
06/02/2026

The world often calls it luck after the outcome becomes obvious.

Before the billion-dollar empire, Zhou Qunfei was a young factory worker learning the language of glass.

She grew up in poverty.
She left school young.
She worked long shifts in a watch-glass factory.

But while others saw factory work as survival, Zhou saw something different:

precision, discipline, and opportunity hidden in details most people ignored.

Years later, she started a small workshop with her relatives — the beginning of what would become Lens Technology.

And when the mobile phone industry began shifting toward glass screens, she was not simply lucky.

She was ready.

That is the hidden truth about timing:

Timing only rewards people who prepared before the market changed.

🏢 A Real Estate Perspective:

The same is true in real estate.

The land no one wants today.
The transit line not yet completed.
The neighborhood not yet fashionable.

By the time everyone sees the opportunity, the best positioning has already happened.

Does extreme success come from timing — or preparation?

Let’s debate below. 👇

(Image generated for storytelling purposes.)

05/31/2026

Things Took A Turn Quickly

05/31/2026

They Realized It Too Late

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