This October saw Nvidia introduce the world to its newest AI model: Llama-3.1-Nemotron-70B-Instruct. The new model is breaking records for remarkable superiority in leading AI systems such as GPT-4 and Anthropic’s Claude-3, according to an announcement through Nvidia AI Developer’s X account.
The model was essentially a super version of Meta’s Llama-3.1-70B-Instruct but was modified to include Nvidia’s own secret sauces in developing higher performance AI.
Nemotron
Called Nemotron, the model represents Nvidia’s attempt to build more “useful” AI than what today’s state-of-the-art systems offer. The company has significantly improved the model with the use of proprietary datasets, novel fine-tuning, and a boost from Nvidia’s own hardware. According to Nvidia, Nemotron is outperforming the leading models in lmarena.AI’s Chatbot Arena-a hot ticket in the ever-changing landscape of AI.
With the battle for AI supremacy heating up, Nvidia’s Nemotron might just set a new standard for what AI can pull off.
Discussion on Reddit
Redditors are drawing some interesting comparisons between NVIDIA’s new open-source AI model to that of OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Many consider this a strategic move by NVIDIA to somewhat confront OpenAI with its alternative, which is as powerful as it is more open due to the promise of weight and training data release.
There is a sense among the users of shared excitement regarding how this move by NVIDIA could disrupt the landscape of AI, moving it toward further competition and innovation, especially in hardware and the performance of AI models.
Others think this is mostly going to benefit NVIDIA, because with the growth in demand for running these models, demand for its GPU will also increase; hence, clever market positioning of this tech giant.
r/Lancaster61: “It’s not altruistic, their pockets happen to line up with the community. By open sourcing this they create a huge demand for it, thus people now need more GPUs to run it.”
r/Slippedhal0: “Imagine a tech company heavily investing into AI tech releasing a model that not only cuts their costs but also brings in customers for more of their tech. I’m shocked.”
r/FuzzyLogick: “Considering the amount of money they are making from hardware, they don’t really need to make money off of it.”
r/ArtFUBU: “I listened to Jensen talk about NVIDIA, and it sounds like he has kept the company up by sheer will and grace of god purely because he’s a good business leader. He’s been waiting for this AI moment his entire career.”
r/arah91: “Which is great for us, we get better AI models no matter who we choose. This is how capitalism is supposed to work, with companies competing rather than one monopoly running the whole show.”