Nvidia has unveiled its new AI platform Rubin and several new models, as it continues to boost AI adoption across a wide range of industries.
On Monday, Nvidia founder and chief executive Jensen Huang opened the event in Las Vegas by presenting the Rubin AI architecture, the successor to NVIDIA Blackwell, as well as open models for healthcare, robotics and autonomy, and a Mercedes-Benz CLA showcasing AI-defined driving.
The chief executive took to the stage at the Fontainebleau stating that AI is expanding into every industry and every device.
“Computing has been fundamentally reshaped as a result of accelerated computing, as a result of artificial intelligence,” Huang said. “What that means is some $10 trillion or so of the last decade of computing is now being modernized to this new way of doing computing.”
Huang said that its first extreme-codesigned six-chip AI platform Rubin is now in full production and aims to “push AI to a new frontier” by drastically reducing the cost of token generation to about one-tenth of that of the previous platform.
During the presentation, Huang explained that extreme codesign – designing all these components together – is now essential. “Scaling AI to gigascale requires tightly integrated innovation across chips, trays, racks, networking, storage and software to eliminate bottlenecks and dramatically reduce the costs of training and inference,” he said.
He also announced the launch of various open models, trained on Nvidia’s own supercomputers, with the portfolio spanning six domains: Clara for healthcare, Earth-2 for climate science, Nemotron for reasoning and multimodal AI, Cosmos for robotics and simulation, GR00T for embodied intelligence and Alpamayo for autonomous driving.
“These models are open to the world,” Huang said, underscoring Nvidia’s role as a frontier AI builder with world-class models topping leaderboards. “You can create the model, evaluate it, guardrail it and deploy it.”
The chief executive cited companies such as Palantir, ServiceNow, Snowflake, CodeRabbit, CrowdStrike, NetApp and Semantec, which have already integrated Nvidia’s AI to power their products.
“Whether it’s Palantir or ServiceNow or Snowflake — and many other companies that we’re working with — the agentic system is the interface,” he said.





