Episode 05
NVIDIA Doesn't Sell GPUs
It monetizes the platform, not the chip.
The Big Idea
NVIDIA doesn't sell GPUs. It sells the platform the entire AI industry has already agreed to build on.
Most people think NVIDIA sells GPUs. It doesn't, not really. Competitors can build fast chips too. What they can't easily build is fifteen years of software nobody wants to rewrite.
NVIDIA's real product isn't silicon. It's the platform underneath it — CUDA — that every serious AI tool has been written against. Everything else supports that objective.
The Invisible Business
Imagine a research lab choosing hardware for a new AI model. A rival chip might be cheaper, even faster on paper. But the lab's tools, libraries, and years of code were all built for one platform.
That decision isn't really about hardware. Behind it sits one invisible question: how expensive is it to leave? That's the business.
CUDA. Developer libraries. Pre-trained model support. Cloud partnerships. Every layer points toward a single outcome: nobody wants to be the one who rewrites everything for a cheaper chip.
Why The GPU Isn't The Product
NVIDIA spends billions advancing chip performance. Most people assume the chip itself is the business.
The chip is actually the visible tip of a much deeper investment — the software platform that makes the chip the default choice before anyone even compares specs.
Viewed that way, every NVIDIA decision suddenly makes sense: why CUDA has stayed free for over a decade, why NVIDIA courts researchers and students long before they're ever buying hardware, why competitors with genuinely competitive chips still struggle for adoption.
The Free Platform Play
Giving CUDA away for free looks like generosity. It isn't. It's the whole strategy.
Every student who learns CUDA in a university lab becomes an engineer who reaches for NVIDIA hardware by instinct. Every library written against CUDA becomes one more thing a rival chip would have to replicate before anyone would switch.
Free isn't the price of the platform. Free is how the platform spreads — and the more places it spreads, the deeper the moat gets. The chip is where NVIDIA charges. The platform is why it can.
Everyone builds up. Nobody wants to rebuild down.
Key Takeaways
CUDA makes the chip the easy part to copy, the ecosystem the hard part.
Every library built on CUDA raises the cost of switching to a rival chip.
Hardware sales fund deeper investment in the software moat.
Cloud providers standardize on NVIDIA because their customers already have.
The moat compounds with every new model trained on it.
Bodhi Reflection
People think NVIDIA competes by building the fastest chip. Perhaps it competes by making sure no other chip is worth learning. Once you see the invisible business, the GPU starts to look like the bait, not the trap.
See what companies really sell.
Next Episode
Visa Doesn't Move Money.
Coming soon