Artificial intelligence may be driving Nvidia’s record growth today, but the company increasingly sees robotics as the next frontier. From humanoid robots and autonomous machines to self-driving cars and robotic factories, Nvidia is positioning itself as the technology backbone of what CEO Jensen Huang calls the era of “physical AI.”

Now, Chinese humanoid robot maker Unitree has landed one of its most significant endorsements yet. Nvidia has selected Unitree’s H2 humanoid robot as the foundation of the first robotics system it is selling to leading research institutions, including Stanford University and ETH Zurich.

The new platform combines Unitree’s nearly six-foot-tall H2 humanoid robot with Nvidia’s Jetson Thor computing system, powered by the company’s latest Blackwell GPU architecture. Rather than simply supplying chips, Nvidia is now packaging hardware, software and simulation tools into a complete robotics development platform for researchers.

For Unitree, the partnership provides access to some of the world’s most prestigious robotics laboratories. For Nvidia, it is another step toward a future where robots become a major driver of growth beyond traditional artificial intelligence applications.


A market Nvidia believes could be enormous 
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has been increasingly vocal about the potential of robotics. Last year, he told shareholders that robotics, alongside artificial intelligence, represented Nvidia’s largest growth opportunity.

“We have many growth opportunities across our company, with AI and robotics the two largest, representing a multitrillion-dollar growth opportunity,” Huang said. He has also outlined a future where robots become as common as computers and smartphones are today.

“We’re working towards a day where there will be billions of robots, hundreds of millions of autonomous vehicles, and hundreds of thousands of robotic factories that can be powered by Nvidia technology,” Huang said.

The company expects rapid expansion in robotics over the next five years as advances in AI make machines more capable of understanding, reasoning and interacting with real-world environments....

....MUCH MORE 

If interested see also the backgrounder at the South China Morning Post, March 23:

Inside Unitree’s landmark IPO: what to know about China’s humanoid giant

And at TechNode, June 2:

Unitree IPO approved, Meituan-backed group emerges as top shareholder