NVIDIA's Future Plan and New Features at COMPUTEX 2024

<p>TapTechNewsJun 3rd, at the beginning of the COMPUTEX 2024 exhibition, graphics chip giant NVIDIA released its future plan and declared its determination to embrace artificial intelligence. NVIDIA announced that its RTX series graphics cards will strongly support Microsoft's new Copilot+ program, which aims to bring a series of powerful local functions to the Windows 11 system.</p><p style="text-align: center;"><img src="https://img.taptechnews.com/news/2024/06/1717371876695679.jpg"/></p><p>TapTechNews noticed that the first batch of adaptable devices include five laptops from ASUS and one model from MSI. Since Copilot+ has not been officially released yet, these laptops will pre-install the regular version of Windows 11, but NVIDIA promises that once Copilot+ goes online, all these devices will be able to get all updates for free.</p><p style="text-align: center;"><img src="https://img.taptechnews.com/news/2024/06/1717371878576074.jpg"/></p><p>Previously, the Copilot+ function was only limited to Qualcomm Snapdragon hardware. The introduction of NVIDIA RTX series hardware this time makes people anticipate how its strong performance will affect this field. Thanks to the powerful mobile GPU, the RTX series can provide up to 1000 TOPS of AI computing power, far exceeding the 45 TOPS provided by the dedicated NPU used by the Snapdragon X series Elite version.</p><p>It is worth noting that NVIDIA currently only announced that the RTX 40 series mobile graphics cards will support the Copilot+ function and did not mention desktop graphics cards.</p><p>In addition, NVIDIA also announced the launch of the "G-Assist" function. This function was first proposed on April Fool's Day in 2017 and was set as an AI game assistant that could help players pass the game, but the AI technology at that time was not enough to achieve this function. Now, with the rapid development of artificial intelligence, NVIDIA can finally officially release G-Assist.</p><p>The G-Assist project can receive player instructions through voice or text input and combine the information in the game screen for analysis and processing through an artificial intelligence vision model. These models can enhance the situational awareness and specific application understanding ability of the large language model (LLM) and combine with the game knowledge database to generate targeted text or voice responses. At the press conference, NVIDIA demonstrated an example where a player asked through G-Assist "What is Rex".</p><p>If this function can run smoothly, players will be able to learn in the game in this way without referring to the strategy guide.</p><p>NVIDIA specially emphasized after the demo that Project G-Assist is currently only a demo project and has not planned to be launched to consumers for the time being.</p><p>What is more practical is the RTX AI toolkit. This toolkit contains a series of SDKs and utilities to facilitate developers to easily create, customize, and optimize AI models for NVIDIA hardware. NVIDIA will open access to this toolkit later in June, which contains a series of LLMs (large language models) optimized for RTX devices.</p><p>In addition, NVIDIA also open-sourced the RTX Remix toolkit for producers to use AI to generate high-resolution textures for old games. The RTX video encoding technology has also received SDK updates and is about to land on the VLC media player.</p><p style='text-align:center;'>2024 Taipei International Computer Show special</p><p></p><p></p>
Likes