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Nvidia introduces open-source software Alpamayo-R1 for self-driving cars
Nvidia introduces open-source software Alpamayo-R1 for self-driving cars
It will expedite their development using the ‘reasoning’ techniques in AI
American technology company Nvidia has released Alpamayo-R1, a ‘vision-language-action’ AI model, for self-driving vehicles. This means such vehicles will translate what their sensor banks see on the road into a description using natural language.
(Alpamayo-RI is named after Peru’s mountain peak, considered very tricky to scale).
The new open-source software will expedite the development of self-driving cars using the new ‘reasoning’ techniques in artificial intelligence (AI). It thinks aloud, as it plans its path through the world.
Thus, if the self-driving vehicle sees a bike path, it will note that and accordingly, change its course.
In contrast, the previous self-driving car software had limitations in explaining why the car chose a particular path. It made it difficult for engineers to understand the requirements needed to fix the issue and carve a safe path for vehicles.
Katie Young, senior marketing manager for the automotive enterprise at Nvidia, stated, "One of the entire motivations behind making this open is so that developers and researchers can understand how these models work so we can, as an industry, come up with standard ways of evaluating how they work.”
Nvidia is now the world's most valuable company after its chips became central to AI’s development. The company also maintains a broad software research arm that releases open-source AI code that others, including Palantir Technologies, can adopt.



