Nvidia DRIVE Thor, an in-vehicle computing platform, will be used in the primary computer of the Aurora Driver.
Strip District-headquartered Aurora Innovation Inc. announced a long-term strategic partnership with manufacturer Continental and chipmaker Nvidia to build self-driving systems for trucks at scale.
Tech giant Nvidia was founded in 1993 by three computer-scientist-video-gamers in the middle of Silicon Valley. They developed their plans at a local Denny's in East San Jose. With no
Aurora Innovation's shares rose 38% in premarket trading on Tuesday after the self-driving technology developer announced a long-term deal with Nvidia and Germany's Continental to deploy self-driving trucks.
Aurora, based in Pittsburgh, plans to launch its driverless trucks — with Nvidia's hardware — commercially in April 2025. And a supercomputer on your desk And finally, Huang announced Project ...
[Technical.ly] • Pittsburgh-based edtech company Niche acquired Goodkind ... autonomous trucking company Aurora Innovation announced a partnership with chipmaker Nvidia and automotive supplier Continental to mass produce self-driving truck systems ...
Nvidia’s DriveOS operating system would power the new cars, which Huang said has the highest standard of safety. “I predict that this will likely be the first multi-trillion dollar robotics industry.” Aurora, based in Pittsburgh, plans to launch its ...
The company just announced that Nvidia will be a partner in its effort ... Unlike some flashier start-ups, the Pittsburgh-based company has continued to make steady progress toward its long ...
Asian shares traded mixed Tuesday, echoing Wall Street trading, where gains for oil-and-gas producers helped offset drops for Nvidia and other Big Tech companies. Japan’s
Drops for Nvidia and other Big Tech companies were offset by gains in health care, energy and other sectors, leaving U.S. stock indexes mixed
U.S. stock indexes were split as gains for oil-and-gas producers helped offset drops for Nvidia and other Big Tech companies. The S&P 500 rose 0.2% Monday after erasing an earlier
Asian shares are mixed after gains for oil and gas producers helped offset drops for Nvidia and other Big Tech companies on Wall Street. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index slipped in Tuesday trading while shares rose in Hong Kong and Shanghai.