
NIO Technology Day: Self-developed chips, self-developed full-stack OS, next-generation smartphones, and more

NIO Tech Day Full Record: Self-developed Chips, Self-developed Full-Stack OS, Next-Gen Phone, and More At the second NIO IN event, NIO showcased intelligent driving chips, smart cockpit, intelligent chassis, and the second generation NIO Phone. NIO unveiled the Shenji NX9031 chip, announcing its successful mass production. This chip is the world's first 5nm intelligent driving chip. Additionally, NIO introduced SkyOS Tian Shu, a comprehensive vehicle-wide operating system that includes high-bandwidth data throughput, low-latency communication, high computing power, heterogeneous hardware support, cross-domain integration, and information and privacy protection in 7 aspects
The second NIO IN event of NIO concluded this afternoon.
At this NIO IN event, NIO continued the main content of the previous NIO IN, introducing aspects such as intelligent driving chips, smart cockpit, intelligent chassis, and the second generation NIO Phone.
What kind of growth has the seed planted at last year's NIO IN event seen over the past year?
Let's take a look together.
Shenji NX9031
In the opening speech, Li Bin raised the Shenji NX9031 and excitedly announced the successful mass production.
Li Bin also demonstrated the capabilities of the NX9031 chip's ISP processor on-site, showing that under the same 800W camera, the results of NX9031's ISP processing are more refined.
NIO claims that Shenji NX9031 is the world's first 5nm intelligent driving chip.
Shenji NX9031 has over 500 billion transistors, a 32-core CPU architecture, 615 K DMIPS, self-developed high-performance ISP (6.5G Pixel/s, 26-bit width)...
Li Bin proudly stated: "NX9031 is not just leading! I didn't say those four words hahaha." When the audience below shouted out "far ahead," Li Bin responded with a "yes!"
SkyOS Tianhu
Wang Qiyen, Vice President of NIO Digital Systems, stated that although cars have entered the AI era, in the history of automobiles, "there has never been a complete and comprehensive vehicle-wide operating system." So, what does a "complete vehicle-wide operating system" need?
NIO's answer includes 7 aspects:
High-bandwidth data throughput, ultra-low latency communication, support for large computing power and heterogeneous hardware, cross-domain integration, flexible evolution throughout the lifecycle, high reliability assurance, and systematic information and privacy protection.
SkyOS builds a technical cluster of 1+4+N, covering multiple areas such as vehicle control, intelligent driving, cabin, and mobile interconnection.
In this technical cluster, the virtualization system SkyOS-H, which is closest to the hardware, can manage programs, support cabin, and autonomous driving domain multi-operating system requirements, and provide a secure base.
The four kernels (SkyOS-L, SkyOS-M, SkyOS-R, SkyOS-C), when combined, can meet the needs of different types of applications for the entire vehicle, and the middleware is the key to tightly integrating them.
- SkyOS-H
SkyOS-H is a virtualization system oriented towards complex scenarios, high performance, and high reliability, used to manage and schedule the heterogeneous large computing resources of the entire vehicle, providing a secure isolated operating environment for various businesses.
If the entire vehicle computing power is imagined as a large house, then SkyOS-H virtualization technology can divide the house into different functional rooms to meet various purposes and needs.
This requires efforts in performance improvement.
In terms of latency optimization in SkyOS, NIO has reduced the end-to-end execution time of real-time tasks by 50%, increased the throughput of multi-threading by over 40%, and increased the throughput of virtual disks by 15%.
This can more efficiently utilize and manage the resources of the entire vehicle, providing customers with a better driving experience, making OTA updates faster, and improving the connectivity between the vehicle and the driver.
