CEO Jensen Huang presented how the world's second-most valuable firm is bringing technology that powers its lucrative data centre AI chips to consumer PCs and laptops at the Consumer Electronics Show 2025, Las Vegas.
Nvidia presented the Cosmos foundation models, designed to create photorealistic videos for training robots and self-driving cars. This technology aims to improve the efficiency of training autonomous machines and also reduce costs.
The new RTX 50 series GPUs support Nvidia's 'Blackwell' AI technology. This technology provides more realistic textures, such as adding imperfections to surfaces, and improved AI capabilities facilitate the generation of real human faces in games.
Nvidia announced Project DIGITS, its first personal AI supercomputer. Priced at $3,000, this high-performance machine is expected to be available in May 2025.
Toyota, the world's largest automaker, plans to merge Nvidia's Orin chips and automotive operating system into several of its vehicle models, enhancing their safety, autonomous driving capabilities, etc.