
Editor’s note: This post is part of the Nemotron Labs blog series, which explores how the latest open models, datasets and training techniques help businesses build specialized AI systems and applications on NVIDIA platforms. Each post highlights practical ways to use an open stack to deliver real value in production — from transparent research copilots to scalable AI agents.
Companies are asking how to build specialized AI that fits with the way their workflows actually run.
The first wave of enterprise AI was about access. Companies experimented with new frontier and open models, ran pilots and explored how AI can help.
Now, specialized agents — systems of models that can reason, use tools and take action even for the most complex workflows — put more useful AI within reach of the people who already know the work best.
Agents are already helping life sciences researchers accelerate medicine discovery, security teams investigate vulnerabilities with more context and operations teams seamlessly coordinate supply chains.
To tap into these specialized agents, businesses are using a foundation they can adapt and own: one built on models they can customize, tools that connect to systems they already use and infrastructure that lets agents operate safely at scale.
NVIDIA Agent Toolkit — comprising models, tools, skills and a secure runtime — provides an open, modular foundation for building safer, faster, lower-cost digital AI coworkers that enterprises and developers can customize, specialize, control and trust.
Enterprises and developers building secure, specialized AI agents require:
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/nvidia-agent-toolkit-open-models-tools-skills-secure-runtime-ai-agents/#primary
- https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/author/justin-boitano/
- https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/nvidia-agent-toolkit-open-models-tools-skills-secure-runtime-ai-agents/#disqus_thread
- PS5 Disc Drive purchase cap predates Sony's disc cutoff — 'high demand' order limit has been on the store page since at least March 2025
- Samsung chip division's single-year profits beat its past 40 years of profits, combined, due to increased memory and storage prices — Samsung passes Nvidia to b
- Hands-on with Corsair's 2800X RS-R ARGB Micro-ATX PC Case – smaller footprint, roomy internals, includes three fans
- Dev ports Linux to Atari's notorious Jaguar console from 1993 — the first 64-bit console features 2MB of RAM, 13.3 MHz CPU, and Tom and Jerry co-processors; the
- Fill your Steam library without spending a single dime — scratch your shopping itch with the Steam Summer Sale Simulator
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.