Nvidia Corp on Wednesday said it has won a series of deals in which some of China’s biggest technology companies are using its chips to make product recommendations and to develop self-driving vehicles.
Nvidia told reporters that e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and search engine provider Baidu Inc have started using its chips to run systems that make recommendations to users with the aim of increasing the number of times users click on those recommendations.
Nvidia also said ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing has adopted its chips both for developing self-driving cars on the road as well as in its back-end data centres.
The Santa Clara, California-based chip supplier plans to officially announce the deals at an event on Wednesday in the Chinese city of Suzhou northwest of Shanghai.
Nvidia got its start supplying chips to improve videogame graphics on personal computers, but in recent years much of its growth has come from the use of its chips for artificial intelligence, self-driving cars and other new areas.
Making recommendations – whether on a restaurant or product that a user might like – has long been a challenging artificial intelligence problem. In a Wednesday press release, Alibaba officials said click-through rates improved by about 10% using Nvidia’s chips.
“The problem of recommendation is related to the explosion of choice,” Paresh Kharya, Nvidia’s director of product management for accelerated computing, told reporters at a briefing ahead of Nvidia’s event. “To recommend the right product to the right user at the right time, you need to model the user’s preferences and it takes a lot of different variables to model user preferences.
Nvidia also said Didi would use its chips in computing systems in autonomous cars on the road that help drive the vehicles, as well as in back-end data centres where data gathered by test vehicles is used to train algorithms for self-driving cars.
At its event, Nvidia also plans to announce tools that will let participating car makers from Germany, China and North America learn from each others’ training data without having to share data directly – a system called “federated” learning.
“This is a way to aggregate different types of data sets form different companies,” Danny Shapiro, senior director of automotive at Nvidia, said at the briefing. “The key thing here is that each (carmaker) or each region can maintain and protect their own data. It’s owned wholly. It’s not shared.”
(Content and photos syndicated via Reuters)