Nvidia’s Agent Toolkit, the open-source stack combining its OpenShell runtime with Nemotron models and the AI-Q orchestration blueprint, has secured integrations from six of the largest enterprise software companies in the world: Adobe, Salesforce, SAP, ServiceNow, Atlassian, and Box.
The partner list, confirmed by TechRepublic’s GTC 2026 live coverage on Day 2 of the conference, turns what was announced Monday as a platform play into something closer to a production-ready enterprise ecosystem. Every major enterprise application category — creative tools (Adobe), CRM (Salesforce), ERP (SAP), IT service management (ServiceNow), developer collaboration (Atlassian), and content management (Box) — now has a named vendor building on Nvidia’s agentic runtime.
What the Agent Toolkit Actually Includes
The stack has four layers: Nemotron models for reasoning and code generation, the AI-Q blueprint for multi-agent orchestration, cuOpt for combinatorial optimization, and OpenShell for sandboxed code execution. The toolkit ships open-source, meaning enterprises can deploy it on their own infrastructure without per-seat licensing from Nvidia.
The six named partners aren’t building toy demos. ServiceNow and SAP operate in procurement-driven environments where integration commitments signal roadmap investment — these companies don’t announce partnerships for conference clout. Salesforce alone has over 150,000 enterprise customers. When these vendors commit to a shared agent runtime, it creates gravitational pull for the rest of the ecosystem.
Why This Changes the NemoClaw Story
NCT covered Nvidia’s NemoClaw launch on Day 1 of GTC, detailing the security and orchestration stack built on OpenClaw. That article focused on the CrowdStrike and Cisco security partnerships. The Agent Toolkit integrations are the other half: the application layer that actually makes NemoClaw useful to a line-of-business buyer.
A CISO can now pitch the security story (NemoClaw sandboxing, CrowdStrike threat detection), while a VP of Engineering points to the application integrations (Salesforce workflows, SAP process automation, ServiceNow ticket handling). That’s a complete enterprise sale — security plus utility in one stack.
The Competitive Signal
Microsoft’s Autogen framework went generally available this week. Google has its A2A protocol. But neither has published a comparable list of named enterprise partners building on their agent runtime at this scale. Nvidia’s hardware relationships — every one of these six companies runs significant GPU workloads — gave it a distribution advantage that pure-software agent frameworks can’t easily replicate.
The question for the rest of 2026: does the enterprise stack consolidate around Nvidia’s toolkit as the default, or do Microsoft and Google’s cloud-native approaches split the market? The six names on this list suggest the consolidation has already started.
Sources: TechRepublic GTC 2026 Live Blog, Nvidia GTC 2026 News Blog