NVIDIA Plans Open-Source AI Agent Platform ‘NemoClaw’ Ahead of Developer Conference
NVIDIA is reportedly preparing to launch an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw, aimed at helping enterprises deploy automated AI agents across workplace software.

By Samarjit Kaur

on March 11, 2026

NVIDIA, the chipmaker giant, is preparing to launch a new open-source platform to help companies deploy artificial intelligence (AI) agents that can perform digital tasks for employees, according to a WIRED report.

The platform, internally known as NemoClaw, is expected to enable enterprises to build and run AI agents that can complete routine workflows on computers. The move comes as interest in “AI agents”, systems that can plan and execute multi-step tasks with limited human input, grows across the technology industry.

The project is reportedly being pitched to several major enterprise software firms and could be formally unveiled around Nvidia’s annual developer conference in San Jose next week.

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NVIDIA Pushes Deeper Into AI Software

The planned platform signals Nvidia’s effort to expand beyond its dominant position in AI chips into the software layer that powers enterprise AI applications.

According to the report, Nvidia has approached technology companies, including Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe and CrowdStrike to explore potential partnerships around the platform.

The open-source design would allow companies and developers to contribute code and build their own applications on top of the system. NVIDIA is expected to position the platform as hardware-agnostic, enabling enterprises to use it regardless of the underlying infrastructure.

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Rising Industry Interest in AI Agents

The development reflects a broader shift in artificial intelligence toward autonomous systems that can perform tasks such as managing emails, retrieving information or executing workflows across software tools.

AI agents are designed to reason, plan and execute actions to achieve specific goals rather than respond to prompts like traditional chatbots.

Interest in such tools has accelerated with the popularity of open-source projects like OpenClaw, which allow users to run automated AI assistants locally.

Industry analysts see the emerging category as a potential next phase of enterprise automation, with technology companies racing to build platforms that allow businesses to deploy AI agents across everyday workplace systems.

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