At CES, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang presented a bold vision for the future of AI, robotics, and autonomous systems, focusing on the integration of generative AI (GenAI) into the physical world. In a highly anticipated keynote, Huang revealed multiple advancements, including the new GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards and the Nemotron AI foundation model families. However, one of the standout announcements was Cosmos, a suite of tools that aims to bridge the gap between the digital and physical realms.
Cosmos combines powerful foundation models, advanced tokenizers, safety guardrails, and video processing pipelines to enable generative AI to operate in real-world applications. This platform is a significant step forward in Nvidia’s goal to advance AI’s role in industries like robotics, autonomous driving, and digital simulations.
In addition to Cosmos, Huang highlighted further developments in Nvidia’s Omniverse platform, which creates digital twins for simulation and design. He also introduced Project Digits, a mini desktop-sized AI supercomputer that packs immense computational power into a compact form, built on the Grace Blackwell GPU.
With these innovations, Nvidia is positioning itself at the forefront of AI-powered physical world applications, setting the stage for transformative changes in industries from robotics to autonomous vehicles.
Picture by Raysonho @ Open Grid Scheduler / Scalable Grid Engine on Wikipedia |