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    Beverly Hills Examiner
    Home»US News»NVIDIA launches Halos for Robotics as first full-stack safety system
    US News

    NVIDIA launches Halos for Robotics as first full-stack safety system

    By AdminJune 22, 2026
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    NVIDIA launches Halos for Robotics as first full-stack safety system


    NVIDIA, a technology company known for AI computing and robotics systems, has introduced NVIDIA Halos for Robotics. The company calls it the industry’s first full-stack, comprehensive safety system for robotics and physical AI.

    Physical AI refers to machines that can sense, decide and act in the real world. NVIDIA says Halos brings together AI compute, safety software, sensor data, safety applications and inspection. The goal is to give robots a common safety architecture before they work near people.

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    HUMANOID ROBOTS ARE GETTING SMALLER, SAFER AND CLOSER

    NVIDIA introduced Halos for Robotics, a full-stack safety system designed to help robots operate more safely alongside people in industrial workplaces. (Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images)

    What is NVIDIA Halos for Robotics?

    NVIDIA Halos for Robotics is a safety system for robots and physical AI. NVIDIA says it connects the key layers needed to build, validate and deploy robotic systems.

    That includes AI compute, system software, sensor data, safety applications and inspection. In other words, NVIDIA wants robot makers to build safety into the stack from the beginning. That approach becomes important as robots start operating in places where people are already working.

    NVIDIA says the system draws on more than 18,600 engineering years of autonomous vehicle safety development. That background is important because robots and autonomous vehicles face a related challenge. Both need to sense what is happening around them, make decisions quickly and operate more safely around people.

    Why humanoid robots need workplace safety systems

    The next generation of autonomous robots will operate in dynamic environments. A warehouse floor may have workers walking nearby, equipment moving through shared spaces and other robots doing their own jobs. That creates a tough safety challenge.

    A robot needs sensors to understand what is happening around it. Then it needs AI compute to process that information. After that, it needs safety software that can help control behavior in real time.

    NVIDIA says Halos gives robotics companies a standardized safety architecture that connects the main safety layers instead of leaving each part to operate separately.

    “Physical AI is transforming how factories, warehouses and logistics operations work, and robotics teams need a unified safety architecture to scale autonomous systems into these environments,” said Deepu Talla, vice president of robotics and edge AI at NVIDIA. “With NVIDIA Halos for Robotics, developers and system builders can harness NVIDIA’s proven autonomous vehicle safety foundation to develop safer robots faster and bring them into industrial operations alongside workers with greater confidence.”

    How NVIDIA Halos for Robotics works

    NVIDIA Halos for Robotics spans several layers of robot safety. NVIDIA IGX Thor and NVIDIA Holoscan Sensor Bridge provide industrial-grade AI compute, built-in safety and sensor connectivity for real-time robotics and safety workloads.

    NVIDIA Halos OS provides the software stack for robotics safety. That includes Halos Core, which supports safety-related operating functions. The system also includes safety applications built with the NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint. That blueprint uses external cameras and AI agents to help robots adjust behavior in industrial settings.

    Then there is the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab. NVIDIA describes it as the world’s first ANSI National Accreditation Board-accredited program for physical AI functional and AI safety. The lab helps partners prepare Halos integrations for third-party certification from groups including TÜV Rheinland, UL Solutions, TÜV SÜD, exida, SGS and CertX.

    How Agility is using NVIDIA Halos for Robotics

    Agility is the first company to use NVIDIA Halos for Robotics. Its humanoid robot Digit is designed for industrial work in logistics, manufacturing and warehouse settings. Customers include Amazon, GXO, Schaeffler and Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada. Agility is working with NVIDIA to integrate NVIDIA IGX Thor and Halos Core into Digit’s proprietary safe human detection system. NVIDIA IGX Thor provides industrial-grade AI compute with built-in safety capabilities, while Halos Core supports safety-related operating functions.

    The robotics company will also participate in the NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab. Together, Agility and NVIDIA plan to use the lab to help ensure Digit’s safety software, AI components and cybersecurity protections meet standards such as IEC 61508, ISO 13849 and ISO/IEC TR 5469 before final third-party certification.

    “Safety has to be built into the robot and validated across the entire system,” said Peggy Johnson, CEO of Agility. “Partnering with NVIDIA to implement and optimize the Halos for Robotics system extends our leadership in responsible automation, which is a non-negotiable requirement for bringing humanoids safely into industrial workflows.”

     HUMANOID ROBOT SWAPS ITS OWN BATTERY TO WORK 24/7

    NVIDIA says its new Halos platform combines AI compute, safety software, sensor data and certification tools to create a common robotics safety architecture. (Photo by Ding Hongfa/Xinhua via Getty Images)

    Who is part of NVIDIA’s robot safety ecosystem?

    NVIDIA says the Halos for Robotics ecosystem includes partners across software, embedded systems, sensors, silicon, industrial applications and certification bodies. Software partners include Acontis, Amazon FreeRTOS and QNX. Those software partners support real-time operating environments, safety communications and embedded software for functional safety development.

    Embedded systems partners include Advantech and NexCobot, which deliver safety-designed IGX-based systems for robotics deployments. Sensor and silicon partners include Infineon, NXP, SICK, STMicroelectronics and Texas Instruments. Industrial application partners include FORT Robotics, Inventec, KION Group and Neurealm, which are developing functional safety agents using the NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint.

    Certification bodies also play a role. TÜV Rheinland is inspecting NVIDIA IGX Thor, Halos OS and Holoscan Sensor Bridge for functional safety certification readiness. NVIDIA says this builds on TÜV SÜD’s inspection of Thor SoC and certification of Halos Core for ISO 26262. The NVIDIA Halos AI Systems Inspection Lab includes more than 40 companies across manufacturers, certification bodies and safety vendors.

    When NVIDIA Halos for Robotics will be available

    NVIDIA Halos Core for NVIDIA IGX is available in early access for registered developers. It supports Linux and Linux plus QNX configurations.

    The open source NVIDIA Halos Outside-In Safety Blueprint is also available in early access on GitHub. It is part of the Halos Applications layer of Halos OS.

    Based on NVIDIA’s announcement, this is built for developers, robotics companies and industrial operations trying to bring physical AI into real workplaces.

    What this means to you

    If humanoid robots are going to work around us, safety needs to be more than a promise in a polished demo. NVIDIA is trying to make robot safety more standardized before humanoids show up in more industrial spaces. That could help companies move faster. However, it also raises a bigger question: who decides when a robot is safe enough to work beside humans?

    The certification part is what really stands out to me. NVIDIA is talking about safety software, AI components and cybersecurity protections before final third-party certification. That is the kind of detail people should be asking about now, not after robots are already on the warehouse floor.

    But let’s be real here. A humanoid robot that looks impressive on stage has a very different job once it enters a real workplace. Workers will want to know how it sees them, how it reacts to sudden movement and what it does when something goes wrong.

     ROBOT SOCCER PLAYER DENTS WALL WITH TERRIFYING KICKS

    Agility Robotics is the first company integrating NVIDIA Halos into its Digit humanoid robot for warehouse and manufacturing environments. (Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)

    Kurt’s key takeaways

    NVIDIA is making a smart move here. If humanoid robots are going to work near people, safety has to be built into the whole system from the start. Agility’s use of Halos for Robotics shows where this is headed. What stands out to me is the certification readiness. NVIDIA is talking about software, AI components and cybersecurity protections before final third-party certification. That is the kind of detail people should ask about before any company says a robot is ready to work beside humans.

    Would you feel comfortable working next to a humanoid robot if a company said its safety system had been inspected and prepared for certification? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com

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    • Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.
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    Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson is an award-winning tech journalist who has a deep love of technology, gear and gadgets that make life better with his contributions for Fox News & FOX Business beginning mornings on “FOX & Friends.” Got a tech question? Get Kurt’s free CyberGuy Newsletter, share your voice, a story idea or comment at CyberGuy.com.



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