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Nvidia today unveiled the Jetson Xavier NX, a module for training and deploying AI systems on edge devices like drones, cars, and robots. The Xavier NX is about the size of a credit card and can achieve 21 TOPS (tera operations per second) for AI workloads while consuming as little as 10 watts of power.
The Xavier NX will retail for $399 and be available in March.
“We’ve taken Xavier and tuned it for extremely high performance but in a very targeted power budget of 10 to 15 watts, which is really important for a lot of the segments of the autonomous and robotics embedded world,” Nvidia VP Deepu Talla said in a briefing before its release.
Today’s news comes as a consortium of 30 AI industry leaders, including Arm, Google, and Qualcomm, released MLPerf Inference benchmark results, an attempt to create industrywide standards for judging performance of machine learning acceleration hardware and software.
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Nvidia says its Turing architecture GPUs (graphics processing units) beat out competitors like Google’s TPUs (tensor processing units) across five benchmarks in datacenters, while Jetson Xavier edged out competitors in edge use cases like machine translation and object detection.
Nvidia also claimed top honors in MLPerf training results announced this summer.
The scheduled release of the Xavier NX this spring follows the release of the AGX Xavier module last winter and the debut of the Jetson Nano last spring.