Tuesday, October 22nd 2019

New NVIDIA EGX Edge Supercomputing Platform Accelerates AI, IoT, 5G at the Edge

Press Release
NVIDIA today announced the NVIDIA EGX Edge Supercomputing Platform - a high-performance, cloud-native platform that lets organizations harness rapidly streaming data from factory floors, manufacturing inspection lines and city streets to securely deliver next-generation AI, IoT and 5G-based services at scale, with low latency.

Early adopters of the platform - which combines NVIDIA CUDA-X software with NVIDIA-certified GPU servers and devices - include Walmart, BMW, Procter & Gamble, Samsung Electronics and NTT East, as well as the cities of San Francisco and Las Vegas.
"We've entered a new era, where billions of always-on IoT sensors will be connected by 5G and processed by AI," said Jensen Huang, NVIDIA founder and CEO, at a keynote at the start of MWC Los Angeles. "Its foundation requires a new class of highly secure, networked computers operated with ease from far away.

"We've created the NVIDIA EGX Edge Supercomputing Platform for this world, where computing moves beyond personal and beyond the cloud to operate at planetary scale," he said.

The EGX platform features software to support a wide range of applications, including NVIDIA Metropolis, which can be used to build smart cities and intelligent video analytics applications, as well as the just-announced NVIDIA Aerial software developer kit. Aerial allows telcos to build completely virtualized 5G radio access networks that are highly programmable, scalable and energy efficient, and can ultimately enable them to offer new services such as smart factories, AR/VR and cloud gaming.

As also announced today, early ecosystem partners collaborating with NVIDIA include Microsoft, Ericsson and Red Hat.

Global Leaders Turn to EGX for AI at the Edge
Walmart is a pioneer user of EGX, deploying it in its Levittown, New York, Intelligent Retail Lab — a unique, fully operating grocery store where it's exploring the ways AI can further improve in-store shopping experiences.

Using EGX's advanced AI and edge capabilities, Walmart is able to compute in real time more than 1.6 terabytes of data generated each second and can use AI to automatically alert associates to restock shelves, open up new checkout lanes, retrieve shopping carts and ensure product freshness in meat and produce departments.

"At Walmart, we're using AI to define the future of retail and re-think how technology can further enhance how we operate our stores," said Mike Hanrahan, CEO of Walmart Intelligent Retail Lab. "With NVIDIA's EGX edge computing platform, Walmart's Intelligent Retail Lab is able to bring real-time AI compute to our store, automate processes and free up our associates to create a better and more convenient shopping experience for our customers."

Samsung Electronics, in another early EGX deployment, is using AI at the edge for highly complex semiconductor design and manufacturing processes.

"Samsung has been an early adopter of both GPU computing and AI from the beginning," said Charlie Bae, executive vice president of foundry sales and marketing at Samsung Electronics. "NVIDIA's EGX platform helps us to extend these manufacturing and design applications smoothly onto our factory floors."

Other early EGX deployments include:Expanding EGX Ecosystem
NVIDIA's EGX ecosystem includes more than 100 technology companies worldwide, from startups to established software vendors, cloud service providers, and global server and device manufacturers.

To accelerate the move to edge computing, NVIDIA has expanded its server-certification program to include a new designation, NGC-Ready for Edge, identifying systems powered by NVIDIA T4, Quadro RTX 8000 and V100 Tensor Core GPUs capable of running the most demanding AI workloads at the edge. Dell Technologies, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Lenovo, QCT and Supermicro are among the first to work with NVIDIA to certify their systems, now totaling more than 20 validated servers from more than a dozen manufacturers worldwide.

The EGX software stack architecture is supported by leading hybrid-cloud partners Canonical, Cisco, Nutanix, Red Hat and VMware.
Show 10 Comments