Nvidia’s New AI Model For Autonomous Vehicles
Digest more
Nvidia introduces 'Alpamayo family' of AI models with goal of using reasoning-based vision language action models to enable 'humanlike thinking' in autonomous vehicle decision-making - Anadolu Ajansı
To drive that momentum forward, Nvidia unveiled new open Nvidia Cosmos and GR00T models during its Las Vegas keynote event on Monday. The company stated that these models are designed to enable developers to allocate less time and resources to pretraining and more to building next-generation robots.
AI hardware and software giant Nvidia launched new open physical AI models, simulation frameworks and edge computing hardware at the CES show.
The heart of NVIDIA's new family is Alpamayo 1, a 10 billion-parameter chain-of-thought, reason-based vision language action (VLA) model. This innovative model enables an autonomous vehicle to think like a human and solve complex edge cases.
Shanghai, China , March 11, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Today, AgiBot launches Genie Operator-1 (GO-1), an innovative generalist embodied foundation model. GO-1 introduces the novel Vision-Language-Latent-Action (ViLLA) framework, combining a Vision ...
Hexagon Robotics is pleased to announce a strategic partnership with Microsoft aimed at advancing humanoid robots with a focus on: Redefini
What if a robot could not only see and understand the world around it but also respond to your commands with the precision and adaptability of a human? Imagine instructing a humanoid robot to “set the table for dinner,” and watching as it seamlessly ...
Global Partners Adopt NVIDIA Physical AI Global partners use NVIDIA physical AI technologies to power a wide range of autonomous machines, from industrial humanoids to surgical robots. Image Credit: Top left: Caterpillar,
Google DeepMind on Thursday unveiled two new artificial intelligence (AI) models that think before taking action. At least one former Google executive believes everything will tie into internet search in the future. Gemini Robotics 1.5, a vision model ...
Dubai: The future Jensen Huang described at CES did not revolve around screens or servers. It was about cars that can explain their decisions, robots trained before they ever touch the real world, and AI systems that sit on desks rather than in distant data centres.