Nvidia announces software updates to boost rapid adoption of GenAI


By MYBRANDBOOK


Nvidia announces software updates to boost rapid adoption of GenAI

Nvidia has announced a number of updates to its software offerings that aim to make it easier for a wider variety of businesses to use generative artificial intelligence. The chip company officially released the NIMs (Nvidia inference micro services) as it calls them. They are software packages that take care of many of the logistical issues needed to use AI for a specific purpose.

 

Generative AI, the technology behind chatbots, voice recognition and other automated human interactions with computers, often requires the orchestration of numerous pieces of hardware, software and information retrieval. As many companies don’t have the expertise, Nvidia is trying to do that for them for a fee.

 

Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s founder and Chief Executive Officer showcased his company’s latest offerings Monday at the Siggraph conference in Denver. He’s at the graphics technology conference — the latest in a stream of appearances at public events — seeking to persuade as many industries as possible to start using his technology and make AI pervasive in the economy.

 

Huang is also scheduled to appear on stage at the conference with Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

 

Nvidia’s chips have become central to the surge in building new systems being deployed to support artificial intelligence computing. The company’s revenue doubled last year and is on course to double again in the current fiscal year.

 

“The Nvidia NIM is a comprehensive solution for deploying generative AI simplified for developers, but built for applications at scale,” said Kari Briski, Nvidia’s vice president of product management for AI and HPC software development kits.

 

Nvidia had made about 100 of the inference micro services available in preview and is now releasing completed versions.

 

For example, Getty Images Holdings’ services are improving high-resolution image generation by making the software better at understanding text prompts. Shutterstock Inc.’s Edify three-dimensional image generator is going live with the ability to respond to text or images.

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