NVIDIA、オープンソースモデルで通信業界に挑戦
Nvidiaは通信事業者向けに自律的なワークフローを可能にするオープンソースモデルを提供し、エリクソンやノキアなどの従来のネットワークベンダーと競合する。
キーポイント
Nvidiaの通信業界参入
Nvidiaが通信業界向けにオープンソースモデルを提供し、新たな市場に進出している。
自律的ワークフローの促進
同社のアプローチは通信事業者のより自律的なワークフローを可能にすることを目指している。
従来ベンダーとの競合
エリクソンやノキアなどの従来のネットワークベンダーとの競争に直面している。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
Nvidiaの通信業界参入は、AI技術の応用範囲拡大を示すとともに、従来の通信インフラ市場に新たな競争軸をもたらす可能性がある。オープンソースモデルの提供は業界の標準化やイノベーション促進につながる一方、既存ベンダーとの競合激化も予想される。
編集コメント
通信業界という新たな市場へのNvidiaの進出は、AI技術の応用範囲拡大の一例として注目されるが、記事内容が簡潔なため詳細な技術的革新性や実装方法については不明。
Nvidia、通信事業者向けにオープンソースモデルを公開
Nvidiaは、通信事業者がAIを活用してネットワークの運用効率を高められるようにする、新たなオープンソースのソフトウェアフレームワークを発表しました。
このフレームワークは「NVIDIA AI-on-5G」と呼ばれ、5Gネットワーク上でAIワークロードを実行するための共通基盤を提供します。同社はこれにより、通信事業者がネットワーク管理、セキュリティ、顧客体験の向上などの業務を自動化し、運用コストを削減できると説明しています。
Nvidiaのアプローチは、通信事業者により自律的なワークフローを実現することに焦点を当てていますが、エリクソンやノキアといった従来のネットワークベンダーとの競争に直面しています。
原文を表示
Nvidia released an open source Large Telco Model aimed at enterprises in the telecommunications industry looking for AI models that are trained specifically on their data and knowledgeable about their processes.The AI hardware-software giant said it built the new model on its Nemotron 3 family of foundation models, which it released in December.The Large Telco Model (LTM) is trained to understand the telecommunications industry's language and processes through workflows such as fault isolation, the process of locating the part of a system that is responsible for failure; remediation planning, or planning ways to correct a deficiency or failure; and change validation, the process of approving changes to a system, Nvidia said. Aside from the LTM, Nvidia unveiled its Intent-Driven RAN Energy Efficiency Blueprint, a closed-loop agentic workflow for energy optimization.The LTM, introduced on Feb. 28 at the Mobile World Congress Barcelona, reflects a trend in which telecommunications companies increasingly require domain-specific models to drive more autonomous networks. Nvidia is not the only model provider working toward providing these domain-specific models. For example, in partnership with Vodafone, Microsoft is deploying Azure-powered agents that can be used for network operations. AMD is also participating in the "Open Telco AI" initiative and providing hardware and compute power to run telco-specific models.Related:Neura Robotics, AWS Collaborate to Bring Physical AI to the Real WorldNvidia's LTM for TelcosFor its part, with the open source LTM, Nvidia is enabling telcos to create their own datasets and integrate them more deeply into their systems and networks."[It’s] a model that's been trained and developed using all the industry standards and information and data sets," said Susan Welsh de Grimaldo, an analyst at Gartner.Beyond providing a domain-specific model, Nvidia is also offering a way to address the challenges telco teams face when automating their processes, said Nick Patience, an analyst at Futurum Group."Current automation is rules-based," Patience said. "It breaks down the moment something falls outside the script."The LTM focuses on the layer above the system that can interpret the operator's intent and make decisions that weren't explicitly stated, using its reasoning mode, he said."Network operations have real consequences when they fail, and reasoning models work through multi-step problems rather than pattern-matching to a likely answer," Patience said.Nvidia is also focusing on transparency, security, guidelines, and governance for its AI models, recognizing that these are important to enterprises in the telco market, he said.Related:Anthropic Seals $100B Infrastructure Deal With Amazon"When you think about autonomous networks and building AI agents for running networks, we're going to see both human and AI involvement," Welsh de Grimaldo said. She added that Nvidia, understanding this, realized that the models need to be trained to understand skills building from a network operations engineer's perspective, which can "drive better improvements in how it's used in running different functions inside the network."Some ObstaclesHowever, a key challenge Nvidia faces is that it competes with traditional network vendors with well-established customer bases, such as Ericsson and Nokia."Nvidia's new to the domain," said Lian Jye Su, an analyst at Omdia, a division of Informa TechTarget. He added that while the AI hardware provider has been working with telco vendors for years, this is the first time the vendor is offering its product as a competing alternative. Moreover, AI is not the only answer to some of the challenges in the telco arena."Bringing AI to the table does help reduce a lot of the complexity, but fundamentally, there are a lot of more nuanced challenges that Nvidia alone won't be able to solve," Su said. Related:AMD's Vision for AI PCs in the Age of Agentic AIAnother challenge is that while the model is open source, it remains to be seen "whether telco IT organizations can absorb it fast enough to matter," Patience said.About the AuthorNews Writer, AI BusinessEsther Shittu brings four years of expertise covering artificial intelligence technologies and industry trends. As co-host of the "Targeting AI" podcast, she talks to thought leaders and practitioners exploring critical AI developments. Previous to AI Business, she wrote for several publications including the New York Daily News, Bklyner and the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. When she's not diving deep into the world of AI, she spends her time on passion projects and raising her three daughters.
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