Nvidia plans to make Earth 2 in Omniverse for climate modelling

Nvidia’s GTC event was held last week with tonnes of sessions and conferences on new technologies and how they’re being used. One in particular, showed off by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang could be pretty huge for computing power which we may even see come to gaming. It’s all about making that Million -X leap.

Though this isn’t the first time we’ve seen big, and slightly confusing dreams from the Nvidia CEO. However, the company does continue to do cool things with its AI tech. Check out these words as they turn into photorealistic images.

According to Nvidia, researchers are attaching a set of three thrusters to achieve accelerated computing. Accelerated computing is all about using specialised hardware to allow parallel processors, rather than serial ones, to speed up work time. We’ve seen speeds increase by over 1,000x thanks to accelerated computing. This allows researchers to do amazing things, like using deep learning to dramatically increase the speed of quantum chemistry to help get medicines made much faster than before.

Your next upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

Best CPU for gaming: the top chips from Intel and AMD
Best graphics card: your perfect pixel-pusher awaits
Best SSD for gaming: get into the game ahead of the rest

Next up, Nvidia wants to use this Million-X computing to build a second Earth. Unfortunately it’s not at the point where it could be for living on, but instead is intended as a climate model. Making an Earth 2 in Nvidia’s Omniverse will allow for climate change modelling at a more regional level. Being able to predict how our planet might change may just give us a leg up, or just be horrifying to watch in advance. 

The simulations don’t end there. Accurate recreations of factories and cities have been constructed by researchers using this technology. Running high tech simulations in digital environments is bound to help in increasing efficiency and safety in many cases. In others it may just look cool, but that’s ok too. 

As a part of this Million-X performance announcement, Nvidia is encouraging developers to share their projects online with the #MyMillionX and tagging @NVIDIAHPCDev. It will be interesting to see what people come up as the tag picks up traction.

Hope Corrigan
Hardware Writer

Hope’s been writing about games for about a decade, starting out way back when on the Australian Nintendo fan site Vooks.net. Since then, she’s talked far too much about games and tech for publications such as Techlife, Byteside, IGN, and GameSpot. Of course there’s also here at PC Gamer, where she gets to indulge her inner hardware nerd with news and reviews. You can usually find Hope fawning over some art, tech, or likely a wonderful combination of them both and where relevant she’ll share them with you here. When she’s not writing about the amazing creations of others, she’s working on what she hopes will one day be her own. You can find her fictional chill out ambient far future sci-fi radio show/album/listening experience podcast right here. No, she’s not kidding. 

Read more
Nvidia GR00T N1 robotics
Nvidia's GTC keynote inevitably went all in on AI but I'm definitely here for the Isaac GR00T robots
A screenshot taken from the 2025 Nvidia tech demo Zorah
Nvidia RTX 50-series and dev kit show that rasterization is old news and we're now firmly in the era of AI rendering
Nvidia H100 chips inside a server room at the Yotta Data Services Pvt. data center, in Navi Mumbai, India
Turns out there's 'a big supercomputer at Nvidia… running 24/7, 365 days a year improving DLSS. And it's been doing that for six years'
The Asus ROG Astral GeForce RTX 5090 on an LED-lit table at CES 2025
Jen-Hsun reckons Nvidia has driven the 'cost of computing down by 1,000,000 times'
SUQIAN, CHINA - JANUARY 27, 2025 - An illustration photo shows the logo of DeepSeek and ChatGPT in Suqian, Jiangsu province, China, January 27, 2025. (Photo credit should read CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
China's DeepSeek chatbot reportedly gets much more done with fewer GPUs but Nvidia still thinks it's 'excellent' news
An artist’s illustration of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope revealing, in the infrared, a population of small main-belt asteroids.
GPUs powering AI will probably be the end of us all but at least they're being used to find small city smashing asteroids before they do
Latest in Software
CHINA - 2025/02/11: In this photo illustration, a Roblox logo is seen displayed on the screen of a smartphone. (Photo Illustration by Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
'Humans still surpass machines': Roblox has been using a machine learning voice chat moderation system for a year, but in some cases you just can't beat real people
OpenAI logo displayed on a phone screen and ChatGPT website displayed on a laptop screen are seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on December 5, 2022.
ChatGPT faces legal complaint after a user inputted their own name and found it accused them of made-up crimes
A photo of a monitor displaying the output screen of Razer's AI QA Copilot system
It's not for PC gamers but Razer's new AI QA Copilot could ultimately benefit every PC gamer out there, and it's looking like it could be a killer app that AI needs right now
Public Eye trailer still - dead-eyed police officer sitting for an interview
I'm creeped out by this trailer for a generative AI game about people using an AI-powered app to solve violent crimes in the year 2028 that somehow isn't a cautionary tale
Microsoft Copilot
A rather pleasing Windows 11 update bug automatically uninstalls Copilot and unpins it from the taskbar, which is jolly nice of it
midnight murder club
Five new Steam games you probably missed (March 17, 2025)
Latest in News
Minthara BG3 looking upset
Another round of Baldur's Gate 3 unearthing reveals Minthara can end up living in a sewer, an unused beach ending, and more
A shirtless man rides a big fish underwater
Ark devs distance themselves from AI-generated trailer: 'we did not know that they were doing it'
Team Fortress Spy being shocked
An FPS studio pulled its game from Steam after it got caught linking to malware disguised as a demo, but the dev insists it was actually the victim of a labyrinthine conspiracy
Neighbors Suburban Warfare screenshot a child aims a slingshot at a man from across a cul-de-sac.
A beta of backyard FPS Neighbors: Suburban Warfare is out now, and the balance discussion is hysterical: nerf trash can lids and children
Grand Theft Auto 6 trailer still - woman in the front seat of a car, looking out the back window while holding a wad of cash
The specter of a GTA 6 delay haunts the games industry: 'Some companies are going to tank' if they guess wrong, says analyst
Screenshot from Wreckfest 2
Wreckfest 2 has hit early access for your car-obliterating combat racing enjoyment