It makes use of a virtually 6-foot tall humanoid chassis and tactile 5 finger arms.
As a part of his AI-palooza Computex keynote, NVIDIA’s Jensen Huang dove into probably the most relatable type of synthetic intelligence: robots. The corporate introduced the brand new Isaac Gr00t reference design humanoid robotic platform that mixes a Unitree H2 Plus humanoid robotic, Sharpa five-fingered arms and NVIDIA Jetson Thor onboard compute. That is tied along with NVIDIA’s Gr00t open software program and fashions designed to assist “researchers and builders speed up humanoid growth workflows.”
The platform makes use of a virtually 6-foot tall Unitree H2 humanoid chassis that weighs 150 kilos, with 31 levels of freedom throughout the physique. (The H2 mannequin is listed on Unitree’s web site for $29,900, although the corporate has solely proven renders on its web site). The Gr00t developer platform will even assist the cheaper Unitree G1 humaoid robotic. NVIDIA first revealed its Gr00t N1 foundational mannequin in March.
The chassis is married to twin Sharpa Wave tactile five-finger arms with 22 levels of freedom, multi-view sensing together with a head-mounted stereo digital camera, wrist cameras and inertia measurement, together with whole-body management with arm torque of as much as 120 Newton-meters (88 foot kilos).
Gr00t Isaac is powered by NVIDIA’s Jetson AGX Thor T5000 onboard compute with an NVIDIA Blackwell GPU, 128GB of unified reminiscence and a configurable 40 to 130 watt energy vary . The 15Ah battery offers just below 1 kWh of capability for about three hours of endurance.
As has been a theme with humanoid presentations, there was no bodily robotic to be seen. Somewhat, Huang touted Isaac Gr00t as an open basis humanoid growth platform. The corporate stated that a number of establishments together with Ai2, ETH Zurich, Stanford Robotics Middle and UC San Diego will use the reference design. “Robotics strikes quickest when researchers can construct on open platforms, share code and check concepts on actual machines,” stated Stanford Robotics Middle’s government director Steve Cousins in an announcement.