5 Amazing New Products NVIDIA Introduced at 2018 GTC

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Graphics chip specialist NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) announced many exciting new products and partnerships last week at its annual GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose, which is widely considered the premier artificial intelligence (AI) event of the year.

These new initiatives have the potential to catapult NVIDIA even further ahead of the competition in the markets in which it plays. These include computer graphics for gaming and professional visualization applications and the burgeoning AI space, in which the company's graphics processing unit (GPU)-based approach to deep learning (DL) is being rapidly adopted for a wide range of applications. (DL is a type of machine learning within AI that aims to simulate in machines the way humans make inferences from data.)

Below are five key new products and partnerships investors should know about.

Front view from inside a vehicle that's driving on a 4-lane divided highway that has nobody sitting in driver's seat -- an autonomous vehicle.
Front view from inside a vehicle that's driving on a 4-lane divided highway that has nobody sitting in driver's seat -- an autonomous vehicle.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. DRIVE Constellation, a simulation system for testing driverless vehicles

Ride-hailing giant Uber's recent accident involving one of its test driverless vehicles hitting and killing a pedestrian highlights the need for NVIDIA's new DRIVE Constellation, which is a cloud-based system for testing autonomous vehicles using photorealistic simulation, or virtual reality (VR). Compared with testing vehicles on the roads, the platform is able to much more quickly test a massive range of driving scenarios -- some dangerous -- to see how the vehicle reacts, without risking injuries or fatalities.

In this platform -- which will be available to the company's early access partners in the third quarter -- one server runs NVIDIA DRIVE Sim software to simulate an autonomous vehicle's sensors, such as cameras, radar, and lidar. The stream of data that's generated is fed into NVIDIA's DRIVE Pegasus AI car supercomputer for processing. Pegasus' driving commands are then fed back into the simulator, creating a feedback loop that's used to validate that Pegasus is operating the simulated vehicle correctly.

2. Arm partnership to bring AI to the Internet of Things

Under this partnership, NVIDIA and U.K.-based leading semiconductor designer Arm, which is owned by Japan's SoftBank and its Venture Fund, plan to bring AI to billions of mobile, consumer electronic, and Internet of Things (IoT) devices. The duo will integrate the open-source NVIDIA Deep Learning Accelerator (NVDLA) architecture into Arm's Project Trillium platform for machine learning, making it easy for chip companies to integrate AI into their chip designs.

NVDLA is based on NVIDIA Xavier, the world's most powerful autonomous-machine system on a chip, and is aimed at promoting a standard way to design deep-learning inference accelerators. Once NVIDIA's tech is integrated into billions of interconnected IoT devices, it should be more difficult for competing AI technologies to gain a foothold in what's expected to be a gigantic market.