Nvidia launched Cosmos, a new artificial intelligence platform that contains multiple generative world foundation models (WFMs), on Monday at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2025.
The platform does not only contain these AI models but also include advanced tokenisers, accelerated video processing pipeline, and guardrails that enable the platform to develop physical AI systems such as autonomous vehicles and robots.
Additionally, the company open-sourced the WFMs and made it available for academic and research purposes. Nvidia also introduced the Llama Nemotron family of AI models at CES 2025.
In a newsroom post, the tech giant detailed its new Cosmos platform. The platform will only host WFMs along with several components that allow for the training and development of physical AI systems.
Notably, physical AI systems are machines that come with mechanical parts and ability to interact and take actions in the real world.
Nvidia highlighted that training and developing physical AI systems, including robots and autonomous vehicles, is a costly venture due to the requirement of vast amounts of real-world data and a diverse range of testing environments. Cosmos platform's WFMs solve both problems.
The tech giant claimed that these world AI models can generate massive amounts of photoreal and physics-based synthetic data that can be used to train physical AI systems.
The data can also be used to assess existing robots by subjecting them to testing environments. Additionally, Nvidia Cosmos also allows developers to build custom models by fine-tuning the WFMs.