NVIDIA announced today at its AI Summit a collaborative effort with leading U.S. technology companies to help organisations create custom AI applications using its latest NIM Agent Blueprints, NeMo, and NIM microservices.
Major organisations including AT&T, Lowe's, and the University of Florida are among the first to utilise NVIDIA's NeMo microservices to develop their own AI applications. Tech consulting giants Accenture, Deloitte, Quantiphi, and SoftServe are adopting NVIDIA's tools to assist clients across various sectors in creating custom AI agents and copilots.
Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA, emphasised the transformative power of AI, stating, "AI is driving transformation and shaping the future of global industries. In collaboration with U.S. companies, universities and government agencies, NVIDIA will help advance AI adoption to boost productivity and drive economic growth."
NVIDIA introduced new NeMo microservices - NeMo Customizer, NeMo Evaluator, and NeMo Guardrails - designed to streamline the development of custom generative AI applications. The company also unveiled a new NIM Agent Blueprint for software container security.
Several industry leaders are already leveraging NVIDIA's AI tools. AT&T is working with Quantiphi to build a conversational platform using NVIDIA NIM. The University of Florida has adopted NVIDIA NIM and NeMo to enhance its learning management system. Lowe's is exploring NVIDIA NIM and NeMo microservices to improve customer and associate experiences.
Global consulting firms are also utilising NVIDIA's tools to help their clients build custom AI applications. Accenture is using NVIDIA NeMo and NIM microservices through its AI Refinery™ and the Accenture NVIDIA Business Group. Deloitte is integrating the latest NVIDIA NIM Agent Blueprint into its cybersecurity solutions. SoftServe has developed a generative AI Industrial Assistant using NeMo and NIM microservices.
Data and AI platform leaders, including Cloudera, Google Cloud, SAP, ServiceNow, and Teradata, are advancing their platforms with NVIDIA NIM. For instance, Cloudera unveiled an AI Inference Service with embedded NIM, promising up to 36x faster inference performance.