Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang unveiled three major initiatives at the company’s annual conference in San Jose: NemoClaw, the Space-1 Vera Rubin Module, and a new autonomous vehicle partnership with Bolt.

NemoClaw is an open-source platform enabling enterprises to deploy secure, privacy-controlled AI agents. Built on Austrian developer Peter Steinberger’s OpenClaw framework, it addresses prior vulnerabilities involving sensitive corporate data. Huang called OpenClaw ‘the most popular open source project in the history of humanity’ and declared every company needs an OpenClaw strategy.

Huang introduced the Space-1 Vera Rubin Module - a radiation-hardened GPU-based computer designed for orbit. Delivering up to 25x more compute than prior chips, it enables real-time LLM inference and on-orbit processing of satellite data. Cooling remains a key engineering challenge; no release date was given.

Nvidia also confirmed a partnership with European rideshare app Bolt to deploy Level 4 robotaxis across the continent using Nvidia’s DRIVE Thor platform. Bolt aims to field 100,000 autonomous vehicles by 2035. Additional automaker partners include BYD, Hyundai, Nissan, Geely, and Uber.