Nvidia Unveils New Graphics Cards, AI supercomputer, And Advanced Robot Training Technology
Nvidia announced multiple new products this Monday during the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. The tech giant unveiled a personal AI desktop supercomputer, a new AI technology to train robots and vehicles, and new graphic cards.
In a Rush? Here are the Quick Facts!
- Nvidia’s new personal AI supercomputer Project DIGITS will be available in May starting at $3,000.
- The new open-model Nvidia Cosmos will accelerate video processing and training for robots and autonomous vehicles.
- The new RTX 50 series chips will improve video and enhance images to generate more realistic figures.
During a 90-minute keynote, Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang introduced the company’s new technologies with videos and more details of the latest products. Most products focus on AI innovation.
“It started with perception AI, understanding images, words, and sounds. Then generative AI, creating text, images, and sound,” said Huang at the event. “Now, we’re entering the era of ‘physical AI’, AI that can proceed, reason, plan, and act.”
The tech giant announced a new personal AI supercomputer called Project DIGITS, including an NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip, that will be available in May starting at $3,000. The new device has been designed for data scientists, AI researchers, students, and those who need to run and deploy advanced AI models.
“AI will be mainstream in every application for every industry. With Project DIGITS, the Grace Blackwell Superchip comes to millions of developers,” said Huang.
Nvidia also launched Nvidia Cosmos, a new platform under an open model license—available for download through the company’s NGC catalog or Hugging Face—to accelerate video processing and training for robots and autonomous vehicles through “synthetic” data—realistic artificially generated data.
Huang also announced a new partnership with Toyota to build next-generation electric vehicles—the Japanese automaker also partnered with Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation to build a zero-traffic accident AI platform a few months ago.
The tech giant also revealed its new Blackwell family graphic cards—the AI chips reported overheating problems a few weeks ago—the RTX 50 series which will improve video and enhance images to generate more realistic figures. Nvidia announced the new chips will be available later this month, and, according to Engadget, the prices for the new chips start at $549 for the model RTX 5070 and $1,999 for the RTX 5090.
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