Nvidia is set to launch “NemoClaw,” an open-source platform for autonomous AI agents, according to a report by WIRED, aiming to provide enterprises with a standardized framework for deploying digital workers.
The platform is designed to be hardware-agnostic, allowing businesses to run NemoClaw agents on infrastructure from various providers, including competitors such as AMD. This marks a strategic shift for Nvidia, which has traditionally utilized its proprietary CUDA ecosystem to maintain hardware lock-in. According to the report, Nvidia has approached major software providers including Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike for potential partnerships to integrate the platform into existing enterprise stacks.
NemoClaw draws technical inspiration from OpenClaw, an open-source framework that gained viral popularity in early 2026 for its ability to run locally and perform autonomous shell commands and browser-based tasks. Unlike its predecessor, NemoClaw will reportedly focus on enterprise-grade security and privacy layers to mitigate risks associated with “rogue” or unmonitored AI agents.
The initiative builds on Nvidia’s existing software portfolio, which includes the Nemotron-3 family of models and the NeMo Agent Toolkit. Analysts suggest the platform is intended to capitalize on the industry’s shift from passive chatbots to proactive agents that operate with minimal human supervision.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is expected to formally unveil the platform at the company’s annual GTC developer conference, scheduled for March 15-19 in San Jose. Huang is slated to deliver the keynote address on March 16 at the SAP Center.
Nvidia is the world’s leading manufacturer of high-end graphics processing units (GPUs) and AI accelerators. The company has increasingly expanded its software and services division to support the growing demand for generative AI and autonomous systems across the Fortune 500.




