By
Tim Culverhouse
January 8, 2024
NVIDIA
NVIDIA and its partners plan to expand generative AI use in robotics.
Get news, papers, media and research delivered. Sign up for our free newsletters.
Stay up-to-date with news and resources you need to do your job. Research industry trends, compare companies and get weekly market intelligence with Robotics 24/7.
NVIDIA
NVIDIA and its partners plan to expand generative AI use in robotics.
It's been a decade since NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang delivered the company's DGX AI supercomputer to Open AI, and at CES 2024 in Las Vegas, the smart robotics organization made another major announcement in the artificial intelligence and robotics field.
Speaking in a special address at CES, NVIDIA Vice President of Robotics and Edge Computing Deepu Talla laid out a plan for the company and its partners - including Boston Dynamics, Covariant, Sanctuary AI, Unitree Robotics, Collaborative Robotics and others - to bring generative AI and robotics together.
At the center of the relationship is GPU-accelerated large language models (LLMs), which bring higher levels of adaptability and intelligence to various machines.
LLMs work as the language center in the robot "brain" and will allow them to better understand and more naturally respond to human prompts. As such, these machines will have the ability to learn from not only human interaction, but their robot counterparts.
“Given these attributes, generative AI is well-suited for robotics,” Talla said.
Organizations can use NVIDIA's data center compute infrastructure in conjunction with its AI and NVIDIA Omniverse platforms to simulate and train AI models.
The second computer in the model represents the robot's runtime environment, whether that's on the cloud or in a data center.
Instead of robots being built for specific tasks and spending countless hours modifying them for other ones, the hope is that these advancements in LLMs and vision language models will reduce those bottlenecks and allow for better human-robot interactions through natural language, Talla said.
Tim is the Editorial Director of Robotics247.com. His mission is to provide valuable information and insights to robotics professionals and decision-makers, and to help them solve business challenges. He is a creative, deadline-driven, and detail-oriented storyteller. In addition, he is a sports broadcaster and public address announcer.
Ultrasonic sensing enhances robotics perception
Cybernetix Ventures’ event kicks off Robotics Tech Week 2026 slate of events
Preview the manufacturing and warehouse components that will be on the…
Preview the manufacturing and warehouse robots and software that will be on…