
A “robot brain” created by Nvidia has the potential to revolutionize the robotics sector. For $3,499, a developer kit for its robotics chip module, Jetson AGX Thor, is currently offered.
The initial kits, which are intended to build sophisticated robots, will be shipped the following month.
According to Nvidia, the Jetson AGX Thor has 128GB of RAM to enable huge ai models and is 7.5 times quicker than the previous version. The Blackwell graphics processor, Nvidia’s most recent generation of technology used in AI Chips and computer gaming chips, serves as the foundation for the chip.
Each module costs $2,999 when ordered in bulk in quantities greater than 1,000.
Module prices for bulk orders over 1,000 units are $2,999.
Jetson Thor is made to minimize reliance on the cloud by running sophisticated AI models, such as generative reasoning and vision-language models, in real time at the edge.
By running sophisticated AI models like generative reasoning and vision-language models in real time at the edge, Jetson Thor reduces reliance on the cloud.
To reduce reliance on the cloud, Jetson Thor is built to run sophisticated AI models, such as generative reasoning and vision-language models, in real time at the edge.
Jetson Thor is built to minimize reliance on the cloud by running sophisticated AI models, such as generative reasoning and vision-language models, in real time at the edge.
According to Nvidia, the most valuable publicly traded corporation in the world, companies like Boston Dynamics, Amazon, Meta, and Agility Robotics are already utilizing its Jetson series for robotics applications.
The Santa Clara-based company has become one of the leading tech corporations thanks in part to Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, who views robotics as the company’s biggest growth prospect outside of artificial intelligence. Currently, robotics contributes about 1 per cent of Nvidia’s total revenue. The corporation recently combined its robotics and automotive divisions into one.
Robots, which are being used more and more in factories and other business settings, have investors feeling optimistic. Humanoids and home robots have enormous opportunities as well. In fact, the market for humanoid robots is projected to reach $38 billion by 2035, up more than sixfold from a previous estimate of $6 billion, according to Goldman Sachs Research.
The market for robots is expanding as a result of growing automation, AI integration, and the need for scalable digital infrastructure.
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