Nvidia Expands Partnerships with Indian Firms, Launches Hindi AI Model
Nvidia, the global chip giant, strengthened its ties with major Indian companies, including Reliance Industries, on Thursday. The company also introduced a lightweight artificial intelligence (AI) model tailored for Hindi, aiming to tap into India’s rapidly growing AI market.
Nvidia’s AI Summit in Mumbai
During an AI summit in Mumbai, Nvidia’s CEO, Jensen Huang, engaged in discussions with Mukesh Ambani, Chairman of Reliance Industries, who is also Asia’s richest man. Speaking at the event, Huang highlighted Nvidia’s increasing presence in India. “Nvidia is AI in India,” Huang said, noting that by the end of the year, Nvidia will have boosted its computing infrastructure in India by 20 times.
Indian businesses, ranging from large corporations to startups, are focusing on AI development in diverse local languages. These AI models are driving solutions like customer service chatbots and content translation. Nvidia’s introduction of the Nemotron-4-Mini-Hindi-4B model, with 4 billion parameters, aims to aid companies in building their own AI systems. This AI model has been trained using a combination of real-world and synthetic Hindi data, as well as English data.
Partnerships with Indian IT Firms
Tech Mahindra is the first to adopt Nvidia’s Hindi-focused AI model, creating Indus 2.0, which caters to Hindi and its many dialects. Nvidia is also collaborating with other leading Indian IT firms, such as Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), and Wipro, to train around half a million developers. These developers will be equipped to design and deploy AI models using Nvidia’s software.
Reliance Industries and Ola Electric are also set to use Nvidia’s Omniverse simulation technology. This tool allows companies to test factory setups and simulate environments in a virtual world before implementation in real life.
India’s AI and Semiconductor Growth
India, with a population of 1.4 billion, has only about 10% of its population fluent in English. With the constitution recognising 22 languages, there is a growing demand for AI models that cater to India’s linguistic diversity. Nvidia’s partnerships reflect a broader trend of global chip companies investing in India, as the country seeks to develop its semiconductor industry and compete with global hubs like Taiwan.
Nvidia has been operating in India for nearly two decades and has offices in major cities like Bengaluru and Hyderabad. Its recent collaborations with Reliance and Tata Group aim to develop AI supercomputers and large language models tailored to Indian languages.