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Australia heatwave stokes risk of catastrophic bushfires
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Australia 71-2 at lunch, need 89 more to win final Ashes Test
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Study shows how fast kilos return after ending weight-loss drugs
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Trump pulls US out of key climate treaty, science body: White House
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England all out for 342, set Australia 160 to win final Ashes Test
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Storm in a tea cup for Frank as pressure mounts on Spurs boss
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Sesko spark masks Man Utd disappointment for Fletcher
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Venezuelan opposition blindsided by Trump, waiting it out
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Guardiola downbeat about Man City's faltering title bid
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City, Villa falter in Premier League title race
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Trump has options in Greenland, but provocation may be the point
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Sesko double not enough as Man Utd stumble at Burnley
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Semenyo stuns Spurs to leave Frank under fire
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Inter extend Serie A lead at Parma after Napoli slip
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US stocks retreat from records as oil falls further
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City stumble again in title race as Villa held
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Man City title bid damaged by Brighton draw despite Haaland's 150th goal
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France's Noel wins World Cup slalom at Madonna di Campiglio
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US immigration officer fatally shoots woman in Minneapolis
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Barca rout Athletic to reach Spanish Super Cup final
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Trump plots offer to buy Greenland as NATO ally Denmark seethes
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What are the US charges against Venezuela's Maduro?
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Syria govt demands Kurdish fighters leave Aleppo neighbourhoods
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Napoli scrape draw with lowly Verona as leaders Inter look to capitalise
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US lays out plan for marketing Venezuelan oil after Maduro ouster
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Saudi strikes Yemen after separatist leader skips talks
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Rosenior vows to make fast start as Chelsea boss
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3,000 tourists evacuated as Argentine Patagonia battles wildfires
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US oil giant Chevron interested in Russian Lukoil's foreign assets: report
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England great Keegan diagnosed with cancer
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Arraignment postponed for Rob Reiner's son over parents' murder
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Trump plots to buy Greenland as NATO ally Denmark seethes
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US seizes Russia-linked oil tanker chased to North Atlantic
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Accused scam boss Chen Zhi arrested in Cambodia, extradited to China: Phnom Penh
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Pakistan cruise past Sri Lanka in T20I opener
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Oil sinks as US ups pressure on Venezuela over crude supplies
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Frenchwoman accused of libel over Nazi 'collaborator' family novel
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Fossils discovered in Morocco shed light on our African roots
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Arsenal must win trophies to leave 'legacy' - Arteta
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Brazil's Bolsonaro back to hospital after prison fall
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AI helps pave the way for self-driving cars
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Strasbourg offer too good to turn down, says O'Neil
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US should topple Chechen leader after Maduro, Zelensky says
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Atletico back struggling Alvarez ahead of Real Super Cup semi
Nvidia CEO praises robots as 'AI immigrants'
Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang described robots as "AI immigrants" on Tuesday, arguing they could solve a global labor shortage that is hampering manufacturing.
Addressing concerns about machines replacing human workers, the leader of the world's dominant AI chip company took the opposite stance.
"Having robots will create jobs," Huang told 200 journalists and analysts during a 90-minute session at a Las Vegas hotel on the sidelines of the CES technology show.
"We need more AI immigrants to help us on manufacturing floors and do work that maybe we've decided not to do anymore," said Huang, whose off-the-cuff remarks have become a popular CES tradition.
The gathering runs through Friday, with some 130,000 attendees.
Like every year, robots are a major presence at CES, with companies hoping they will break into the mainstream as useful devices instead of novelties.
A "robotics revolution" will compensate for labor losses from aging populations and demographic decline while boosting the economy, Huang argued.
"When the economy grows, we hire more people," he said, sporting his signature black leather jacket.
Huang, who leads the world's most valuable company at roughly $3.5 trillion, estimated the worker shortage reaches "tens of millions," not thousands, due to demographic shifts.
His comments align with other Silicon Valley leaders, particularly Tesla and SpaceX's Elon Musk, who frequently cite population decline and workforce aging as reasons to embrace automation.
Nvidia is investing heavily in providing the foundational software that can make robots work across multiple industries, including manufacturing, retail, and healthcare.
S.F.Warren--AMWN