Nvidia does not intend to be (and has not been for two years) only a manufacturer of graphics cards for cryptocurrency enthusiasts and gamers. The giant from Santa Clara has been consistently building its empire in the world of artificial intelligence and is preparing another move that may reshuffle the balance of power in the corporate market of AI solutions.
According to Wired, Nvidia is working on an open platform for AI agents called NemoClaw. The product is already being actively pitched to the largest players in the corporate software industry, and the list of potential partners includes Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe and CrowdStrike. None of the companies has officially confirmed the cooperation, but the fact that Nvidia is knocking on such doors speaks for itself.
NemoClaw from Nvidia – Open source with calculation
The platform is to be open source, which means that partners will use it free of charge. Hook? Early access in exchange for active contribution to the project. A classic game in which you build an ecosystem, engage the biggest players and create a network of dependencies before anyone can react.
Importantly, and it is worth emphasizing, NemoClaw will work regardless of whether the company uses Nvidi systems or not (by default, AMD systems). It sounds like a goodwill gesture, but in practice it is a strategic expansion of reach. The more companies that enter the ecosystem, the stronger Nvidia’s position as the standard for AI agents in enterprise environments will be.
Why AI agents and why now?
The market is clearly shifting emphasis. Language models (LLMy) are no longer sufficient as companies want tools that can reason, plan and perform complex, multi-step tasks on their own. AI agents are the layer that poses a real threat to jobs.
Nvidia isn’t starting from scratch. In recent months, it has released fundamental models dedicated to agents (Nemotron and Cosmos) and expanded the NeMo platform, which allows you to manage the full life cycle of an AI agent: from data selection, through customization, to monitoring and optimization.
An elephant in a china shop
However, there is one problem that experts talk about loudly – security. OpenClaw-style tools are still in their infancy, and the risks for enterprise environments where sensitive data and critical processes are common are real.
Nvidia is entering this segment with a bang, just before its annual developer conference in San Jose. You can expect NemoClaw to be one of the hottest topics.