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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to new grads: ‘Run, don’t walk’ toward AI
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to new grads: ‘Run, don’t walk’ toward AI

Fast Company · May 12, 2026, 8:00 PM · Also reported by 4 other sources

Jensen Huang left Carnegie Mellon University’s class of 2026 with a message that pushed back against graduation-season anxiety: there’s no better time than now to be starting a career. During a commencement speech on Sunday, the Nvidia CEO told the new grads that “the timing could not be more perfect” to launch a career than right now. “Your career starts at the beginning of the AI revolution,” Huang told the crowd of 5,800 undergraduate and graduate students. This sentiment landed better with Carnegie Mellon grads—the university which is widely recognized as the birthplace of artificial intelligence and robotics—than it did with others. At the University of Central Florida, humanities department commencement speaker Gloria Cauflield, VP of strategic alliances at Tavistock Group, was booed after touting AI as the “next industrial revolution.” The dissatisfaction with that view points to the broader anxiety new grads are facing as AI changes entry-level hiring. A new survey of 1,000 U.S.-based business majors by AI agent company 11x found that 80% of graduating seniors believe AI has cut entry-level jobs. Another recent ZipRecruiter survey showed that new grads are feeling optimistic about their futures, even if they feel unprepared to enter a job market that has been reshaped and redefined by AI. In recent public speeches, Huang has maintained a spirit of optimism about young people starting their careers while the job market shapeshifts because of AI. That was no different during his commencement speech, during which he said that AI should not be feared, but rather utilized optimistically and responsibly. He doubled down on his belief that while AI might not displace or replace people from their jobs, someone using AI better than them might. While Huang acknowledged that AI has created uncertainty for many people, he said that “every major technological revolution in history created fear alongside opportunity.” “Like every transformative technology before it, it wi

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