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Ankush Sabharwal, CEO and founder of CoRover.ai, revealed that the company has officially become a part of the NVIDIA Inception program.
With the integration into NVIDIA’s ecosystem, CoRover.ai’s team gains access to NVIDIA GPUs, unparalleled computational capabilities, and robust multi-factor support, positioning itself to expedite the advancement and adoption of its generative AI-powered solutions.
At the core of CoRover’s offerings lies its Human-Centric Conversational AI platform, driven by BharatGPT, which is poised to redefine how businesses interact with their clientele. This strategic collaboration with NVIDIA is expected to propel CoRover’s trajectory, empowering the company to reshape the landscape of AI-enabled services on a global scale.
This milestone not only serves as a testament to the unwavering dedication and foresight of the CoRover.ai team but also heralds a plethora of promising opportunities for both the company and its stakeholders.
The company also launched CoroAssist, a secure generative AI Information Retrieval System poised to transform how enterprises access crucial data.
Sabharwal spoke to AIM about how CoRover.ai’s BharatGPT was built and what exactly it offers that the government is on board to implement in its services. Starting its AI journey in 2016, CoRover has been building virtual assistants for various partners and government agencies such as IRCTC, MaxLife, Chennai Police, and LIC, to name a few.
Sabharwal said that CoRover.ai’s BharatGPT is used only to power other virtual assistants, and they do not charge extra for building their own models. “You can come with your data and we can build an assistant for your business with very simple steps,” said Sabharwal. He said that this includes assistants in 14 languages including voice.
Corover.ai is also backed by Google, and leverages its cloud for building LLMs. “Like the government of India’s mission of Make AI in India and Make AI Work for India, our BharatGPT ensures that the data is from India, and remains in India,” highlighted Sabharwal, saying that the company is also currently renting GPUs from Google for building its models.