Here is a clean, powerful, story-driven rewrite of your text. Same facts, but smoother, sharper, and more dramatic:

From Near Bankruptcy to $5 Trillion: The Rise of Jensen Huang & Nvidia

1993: Jensen Huang co-founded Nvidia.

1996: Disaster hits. Nvidia is 30 days from collapse. Jensen lays off half the company and tells his remaining team: “We are one month away from going out of business.”

1997: A lifeline appears. Nvidia wins a contract with Sega—but Jensen admits their chip won’t work. Instead of walking away, Sega invests $5 million, giving Nvidia six months of survival and the chance to completely redesign its architecture.

1999: The gamble pays off. Nvidia goes public and launches the GeForce 256, marketed as the world’s first GPU. The company quickly dominates PC graphics.

Early 2000s: Jensen notices Ph.D. students hacking Nvidia’s gaming cards to run scientific computations. He realizes the GPU is actually a supercomputer disguised as a video card. Nvidia begins pouring profits into CUDA, a platform that turns GPUs into programmable engines for AI and high-performance computing.

2016: Jensen hand-delivers the world’s first AI supercomputer, the DGX-1, to Elon Musk for a nonprofit called Ope$BTC $BTC #BinanceHODLerAT nAI, helping them train early generative models.

2022: Nvidia faces another crisis. The PC market slows. Ethereum moves to Proof-of-Stake, killing the GPU mining boom overnight. GPU resale prices crash. Nvidia’s stock drops 66%.

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2023–2025: AI becomes the biggest infrastructure buildout in tech history. Companies commit hundreds of billions to AI hardware—and almost all roads lead to Nvidia. CUDA keeps developers firmly inside the Nvidia ecosystem.

Today

Nvidia is the most valuable company on Earth, worth $4.3 trillion.

Jensen Huang owns roughly 3.5% of the company, giving him a net worth exceeding $150 billion.

A company that once had “30 days to live” is now the backbone of the AI revolution.

motivational style rewrite.