NVIDIA has come a long way from being known as just a GPU company. Not only is NVIDIA dominating the AI hardware space, they’re also making inroads in the robotics scene. Most recently at GTC Taipei, NVIDIA unveiled its Isaac GR00T Reference Humanoid Robot designed for academic research.
NVIDIA unveils Isaac GR00T robot for academic research
NVIDIA’s Isaac GR00T robot isn’t exactly new. The company has been working on it for a while and has been showcasing new models and updates throughout the years. So, what makes this particular update so interesting?
The NVIDIA Isaac GR00T reference design pairs a Unitree H2 Plus humanoid robot body with Sharpa Wave tactile five-fingered hands and NVIDIA’s Jetson Thor compute module. According to NVIDIA, they describe this as combining the “body” and the “brain” into one integrated package.
It also packs a Jetson Thor module with 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS of compute. There’s also a 14-core Arm CPU and comes with 128GB of memory. The robot stands nearly six feet tall with 31 degrees of freedom in the body and 22 more across its two hands.
NVIDIA is also boasting how various research institutions plan to use its reference design. This includes Ai2, ETH Zurich, Stanford Robotics Center, and UC San Diego’s Advanced Robotics and Controls Laboratory. The company also plans to release a reference workflow for the smaller Unitree G1 is also coming to GitHub and Hugging Face soon.
Why does this reference model matter?
One of the biggest pain points in humanoid robotics research is fragmentation. Every team starts from scratch with different hardware, different software stacks, and different data pipelines. The NVIDIA Isaac GR00T platform tries to fix that by giving research teams a single starting point. The best part is that researchers get to full control of their own robot data, training data, and telemetry.
Obviously this is something that is out of reach for most of us. However, seeing as how more companies are hopping on board the robotics bandwagon, NVIDIA’s reference designs should make it easier. Shipments are reportedly set for later this year.
