NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has announced a new software toolkit, open source models and a series of major industry partnerships designed to accelerate the deployment of autonomous AI agents across enterprise environments.
The NVIDIA Agent Toolkit includes the latest NemoClaw blueprints, Nemotron models, OpenShell secure runtime and CUDA-X libraries, all of which form open source foundations for enterprise AI development.
Cadence, Dassault Systèmes, Siemens and Synopsys are among the first companies to use NVIDIA NemoClaw to build autonomous AI engineers capable of executing simulation and verification workflows as digital coworkers.
These autonomous AI engineers are designed to compress weeks of engineering work into hours, freeing human experts to focus on higher-order tasks that demand specialized judgment.
“The world’s software leaders are bringing AI agents into the systems where work gets done — showing how AI coworkers help employees think faster and execute complex tasks to solve bigger problems,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA.
Huang added that “NVIDIA NemoClaw provides enterprise software developers with the open building blocks to create more secure, long-running AI coworkers that amplify human expertise as they reshape how work gets done.”
NVIDIA also unveiled Nemotron 3 Ultra, a 550-billion-parameter mixture-of-experts model delivering up to 5x faster inference and up to 30% lower cost compared with open frontier models in its class.
CrowdStrike is using NVIDIA Nemotron models to power specialized agents that continuously identify, prioritize and remediate vulnerabilities and policy misconfigurations, reducing the operational burden on security teams.
Palantir is integrating NVIDIA Nemotron models into its AI FDE platform to autonomously execute complex tasks and enable continuous learning from agent interactions for air-gapped enterprise systems.
NVIDIA and Microsoft are partnering on new Windows security primitives and the NVIDIA OpenShell runtime to ensure agents run safely and under full user control on personal devices.
Canonical will integrate OpenShell with Ubuntu through supported snaps and OCI-compliant containers, enabling autonomous agents to run on enterprise servers worldwide.
Red Hat is integrating OpenShell into its full-stack Red Hat AI platform to maintain oversight and policy at the infrastructure level, while also contributing to the OpenShell upstream open source project.
Foxconn is piloting NVIDIA NemoClaw to power its Nurabot and CoDoctor platforms, using teams of specialized AI agents to support clinical reasoning, documentation and care coordination.
Foxconn is also using NVIDIA FOX and NemoClaw blueprints to build MoMClaw, a factory operations agent that connects sensor and machine data with AI agents to deliver real-time insights with privacy controls and safety guardrails.
NVIDIA CUDA-X libraries, including cuDF, cuOpt, AI-Q, NeMo, PhysicsNeMo and CUDA-Q, are now accessible to AI agents as domain-specific skills to expand their operational capabilities.
NVIDIA NemoClaw is available now, while OpenShell is available in early preview, with Nemotron 3 Ultra expected to become available on June 4 via Hugging Face, ModelScope, OpenRouter and build.nvidia.com.