
Julie Samuels
President and CEO of Tech:NYC, the nonprofit industry group representing New York’s technology sector, which she founded in 2016. She is also a venture partner at Hangar and a former executive director of Engine and senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, with public work spanning tech policy, startups, AI, hiring, and New York’s innovation ecosystem.
Nvidia Targets AI PCs With New Blackwell Chip and MediaTek CPU
Bloomberg Technology’s Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow framed Nvidia’s Computex announcements as an attempt to extend AI demand beyond the data center and into PCs, software and physical systems. The central case, led by Jensen Huang and assessed by Bloomberg reporters and analysts, is that Nvidia’s new RTX Spark chip and agentic-AI thesis could redraw parts of the PC and enterprise software markets, even as questions remain about performance, Arm’s history in PCs and the health of the broader hardware cycle.
New York Tech Funding Hits $11 Billion as AI Startups Cluster Near Buyers
Tech:NYC president and CEO Julie Samuels tells Bloomberg that New York’s tech sector is gaining from the AI boom because it offers something different from Silicon Valley: proximity to major industries, customers, capital, and talent inside a dense urban economy. Pointing to record New York Tech Week activity, rising funding and faster tech hiring, Samuels argues that the city’s advantage is not in replicating the West Coast, but in helping AI companies commercialize and build into sectors such as finance and healthcare.